India in talks with Russia, 2 others on fertiliser imports


India in Talks with Russia, Belarus & Morocco on Fertiliser Imports

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | GS-III: Agriculture & Economy | GS-II: International Relations


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Fertilisers involved Urea (nitrogenous), DAP (phosphatic), MOP/Muriate of Potash (potassic), NPK complex
LNG relevance LNG is the key feedstock for urea production; India imports LNG partly for fertiliser plants
Middle East share ~50% of India's DAP and urea imports; ~40% of total fertiliser imports in H1 FY26
China's role World's largest urea producer; controls exports via quota system; no 2026 quota issued as of March 2026
Russia's share ~25% of India's total fertiliser imports (previous fiscal year); top supplier
Morocco's role Home to >70% of world's known rock phosphate reserves; locked 2.5 mt deal for FY26
Belarus relevance Major global producer of potash (MOP); sanctioned by West but available to India
Price movement Urea: projected +60% in 2026; DAP: $425→$600+/tonne; MOP: +12% in 2026
Urea imports FY26 8–9 mt (vs 5.6 mt YoY) — up ~55%
DAP imports FY26 7 mt (vs 4.5 mt YoY) — up ~56%
MOP imports FY26 ~3 mt (vs 3.5 mt prior) — slightly eased
Nodal Ministry Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers (Dept. of Fertilizers)
Subsidy mechanism Urea: statutory price control + production-linked subsidy; P&K: NBS (Nutrient-Based Subsidy) Scheme, 2010
Key domestic producers IFFCO, KRIBHCO (cooperatives); RCF, NFL (PSUs)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. India imports urea, DAP (diammonium phosphate), and MOP (muriate of potash) as its three primary fertiliser imports. [S1]
  2. LNG (liquefied natural gas) is the key feedstock for urea production in India. [S1]
  3. The Middle East accounts for roughly 50% of India's DAP and urea imports. [S1]
  4. Russia accounts for approximately 25% of India's total fertiliser imports — making it India's top single fertiliser supplier. [S2]
  5. Morocco holds over 70% of the world's known rock phosphate reserves; its state entity is OCP Group. [S2]
  6. Belarus is a major producer of potash (MOP — muriate of potash), a key fertiliser for potassium. [S2]
  7. China controls fertiliser exports via a quota system; as of March 2026, China had not issued urea export quotas for 2026. [S3]
  8. Urea prices projected to rise ~60% in 2026 per World Bank projections, before easing in 2027. [S3]
  9. India's DAP imports in FY26 reached 7 million tonnes (up from 4.5 mt YoY). [S3]
  10. The Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) Scheme (2010) covers P&K fertilisers; urea remains under statutory price control. [S4]
  11. The Strait of Hormuz disruption risk is the primary geopolitical chokepoint for India's fertiliser import routes from the Middle East. [S3]
  12. India's Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers (Department of Fertilizers) is the nodal implementing ministry for fertiliser policy. [S4]
  13. As of March 2026, urea inventory was up 10.7% YoY and DAP stocks had more than doubled — reflecting India's buffer-stocking response. [S2]
  14. The ideal NPK ratio recommended for Indian soils is approximately 4:2:1; actual use is heavily skewed toward nitrogen (N) due to subsidised urea pricing. [S4]

8. Mains Relevance

Dimension Detail
GS-III Indian Economy: Agriculture — fertiliser policy, NBS, urea subsidy; also Resource mobilisation and food security
GS-II India's bilateral relations with Russia, Belarus, Morocco; India's strategic autonomy in foreign policy
GS-III Effects of globalisation on Indian agriculture; import dependency and supply-chain risks

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "India's fertiliser import strategy reveals both economic vulnerabilities and geopolitical opportunities. Critically examine India's approach to fertiliser import diversification in the context of the Russia-Ukraine war and Middle East tensions." (GS-III)

  2. "Examine how India's engagement with Russia and Belarus on fertiliser imports reflects its doctrine of strategic autonomy. What are the risks and benefits of this approach?" (GS-II)

  3. "The distorted NPK ratio in Indian agriculture is largely a product of fertiliser subsidy policy. Critically analyse the Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) Scheme and suggest reforms to promote balanced fertilisation." (GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) Scheme, 2010 Direct policy instrument governing India's P&K fertiliser imports and subsidies
India-Russia Strategic Partnership Bilateral trade mechanisms (rupee-rouble settlement) enabling fertiliser deals outside dollar channels
Strait of Hormuz & India's Energy Security Same chokepoint affects both LNG (feedstock for urea) and fertiliser shipments
Green Revolution and Legacy of Chemical Agriculture Historical context for why India is import-dependent on fertilisers
India's Food Security Act, 2013 Fertiliser availability directly underpins PDS grain procurement and food subsidy architecture
OCP Group (Morocco) & Phosphate Geopolitics Morocco's outsized global phosphate dominance and India's long-term supply agreements
China's export control regime China uses quotas to control fertiliser, rare earth, and critical mineral exports — a recurring geopolitical tool
PM-PRANAM Scheme GoI initiative to incentivise balanced/alternative fertiliser use and reduce chemical fertiliser dependence

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing DAP with urea: Urea is a nitrogenous fertiliser (N); DAP is a phosphatic fertiliser (P+N). MOP is potassic (K). Candidates often conflate these in MCQs.

  2. Wrong ministry: Fertiliser policy is under Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers — NOT the Ministry of Agriculture (which handles agricultural extension and schemes). The agriculture ministry handles PM-KISAN, PMFBY etc.

  3. NBS scope confusion: NBS covers P&K fertilisers only — urea is excluded from NBS and remains under statutory price control (fixed MRP). Aspirants often assume NBS covers urea.

  4. Morocco = phosphate, not potash: Morocco's dominance is in rock phosphate (for DAP/phosphoric acid). Belarus and Canada are the major potash (MOP) suppliers. Do not conflate the two.

  5. China as India's top fertiliser supplier: While China is the world's largest urea producer, as of FY25–26 Russia has become India's top fertiliser supplier (~25% share) — not China, whose exports are quota-restricted.


11. Sources