One of the immediate consequences of the Iranian conflict is the disruption of trade through the Strait of Hormuz. This is critical because about one-third of the global fertilizer trade passes through this route, while approximately one-fifth of the world's oil supply is also concentrated here. The rise in fertilizer prices is closely linked to energy commodities: the production of nitrogen-based fertilizers requires natural gas. Thus, any disturbance in the energy market immediately impacts agriculture. Traditional, input-intensive farming is highly dependent on external resources – fertilizers, pesticides, fossil fuels. This makes producers vulnerable to price fluctuations. In contrast, regenerative economies are based on a fundamentally different logic. Soil fertility is maintained not through external inputs, but: for instance, nitrogen is produced using nitrogen-fixing plants, thus avoiding the use of synthetic fertilizers. One of the main concerns with regenerative farming ...