In March 2026, as geopolitical tensions continued to escalate, the global energy supply chain faced severe challenges. Prices of key energy sources such as crude oil and natural gas fluctuated upward, driving up overall production costs across the chemical industry. Consequently, most pesticide product prices trended higher. In particular, prices of upstream glyphosate raw materials—including glycine, yellow phosphorus, and methanol—rose across the board, becoming the main driver behind the glyphosate price surge.
On the project front, multiple upstream raw-material projects for glyphosate advanced steadily. The EI report approval (re-submission) for Anhui Ruibai's 90,000 t/a formaldehyde and 60,000 t/a paraformaldehyde project was publicized; Jingzhou Newtrend broke ground on a 60,000 t/a industrial-grade glycine plant; and Jiangsu Sopu New Material kicked off a 70,000 t/a phosphorus trichloride project.
Corporate updates show that leading producers such as Nantong Jiangshan, Hubei Xingfa, and Sichuan Hebang have all acknowledged that geopolitical frictions are noticeably affecting their operations, with glyphosate and related products currently in an upward price channel.
On the regulatory side, two pesticide-residue-related national food-safety standards took effect in March: GB 23200.122-2026 and the updated "National Food Safety Standard—Maximum Residue Limits for Pesticides in Foods" (GB 2763-2026). The new standards impose stricter maximum residue limits for glyphosate in major crops such as cereals, oil, fruits, and vegetables, setting higher barriers to entry for glyphosate's production process, quality control, and impurity-removal capability.
In export trade, the latest data indicate that China shipped 15,110.23 tonnes of glyphosate in December 2025, with the United States remaining the top destination.
- Glycine price sees significant increase in March
- Yellow phosphorus price experiences "V-shaped" reversal in March
- Glyphosate price shows significant increase in March
- Geopolitical conflicts and policy expectations drive glyphosate higher
- Glyphosate testing enters new phase as national standard GB 23200.122-2026 takes effect
- China updates glyphosate MRLs for corn under new standard GB 2763-2026
- Glyphosate field pesticide registrations total 51 in 2025
- Registration of seven glyphosate products to be approved in Mar. 2026
- Glyphosate dominates bio-breeding support as 61 products gain expanded registration
- China exports 15,110 tonnes of glyphosate products in Dec. 2025
- India imposes anti-dumping duty of USD290/t on Chinese IPA for five years
- Sichuan Xinongwang's 10,000 t/a 98% glyphosate ammonium project
- Anhui Zhongshan to add glyphosate SG capacity
- Jingzhou Newtrend starts construction on 60,000t/a industrial glycine project
- Jiangsu Sopo New Material tenders 70,000 t/a PCl3 project
- Hebei Yuhang's 150,000 t/a paraformaldehyde project
- Anhui Ruibai's 60,000 t/a paraformaldehyde project (re-approval)
- Beijing Dabeinong's herbicide-tolerant soybean DBN9004 secures EU import approval
- Hubei Trisun secures glyphosate patent with glyphosine-free synthesis
- Pesticide industry's 15th Five-Year Plan signals move from growth to optimisation
- Ex-works prices of DEA in China, 25 Mar., 2026
- Ex-works prices of PMIDA in China, 25 Mar., 2026
- Ex-works prices of glycine in China, 25 Mar., 2026
- Ex-works prices of IDAN in China, 25 Mar., 2026
- Ex-works prices of phosphorus trichloride in China, 25 Mar., 2026
- Ex-works prices of isopropylamine in China, 25 Mar., 2026
- Ex-works prices of glyphosate TC in China, the first half of March, 2026

