A fertilizer plant in Saxony-Anhalt is increasingly becoming the focus of state, federal, and European politics. State Premier Sven Schulze (CDU) traveled to Prague for this purpose, EU Agriculture Commissioner Christophe Hansen visited the SKW Piesteritz plant in Lutherstadt Wittenberg, and shortly thereafter, the European Commission presented an action plan for the fertilizer industry. Most recently, Federal Agriculture Minister Alois Rainer (CSU) also got a firsthand look at the situation during a visit to the site near the state borders with Brandenburg and Saxony.
But why is a plant in Lutherstadt Wittenberg, of all places, currently receiving so much attention? The answer extends far beyond Saxony-Anhalt. The example of SKW Piesteritz illustrates why Europe wants to maintain its production of a strategically important raw material—and why food security, energy prices, and geopolitical crises play a decisive role in this.