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
- India is the world's second-largest fertiliser consumer and a net importer of urea, DAP (diammonium phosphate), and MOP (muriate of potash) — making import security a critical food-security issue. [S4]
- In March 2026, India initiated high-level talks with Russia, Belarus, and Morocco to diversify and scale up fertiliser supplies ahead of the Kharif sowing season. [S1]
- The trigger: Middle East tensions (Strait of Hormuz disruption risk) and China's export quota freeze for 2026 threaten roughly half of India's fertiliser import volumes. [S2][S3]
- Strategically significant: fertiliser subsidy is one of India's largest budget expenditures; supply shocks directly translate into food inflation and agrarian stress. [S4]
2. Why in the News
- March 20, 2026: The Hindu reported that India — through government and industry channels — is in active negotiations with Russia, Belarus, and Morocco to boost fertiliser imports ahead of the Kharif season. [S1]
- Triggering factors (2025–26):
- Middle East tensions: escalating conflict risks disruption of the Strait of Hormuz, through which ~50% of India's DAP and urea imports transit. [S1][S4]
- China's export curbs: China, the world's largest urea producer, had not issued fertiliser export quotas for 2026 as of March 2026, creating supply uncertainty. [S3]
- Urea prices projected to rise ~60% in 2026 before moderating in 2027. [S3]
- DAP prices surged from below $425/tonne to above $600/tonne due to market tightening. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
- Colonial-era context: India's fertiliser import dependency traces back to the Green Revolution (1960s–70s), when high-yielding varieties demanded intensive fertiliser application but domestic production capacity lagged.
- 1980s onward: Urea production expanded domestically, but India remained a net importer of phosphatic (DAP) and potassic (MOP) fertilisers due to absence of domestic phosphate and potash reserves.
- Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) Scheme, 2010: Introduced for P&K fertilisers to incentivise efficient use; urea kept under statutory price control. [S4]
- Post-2022 crisis: Russia-Ukraine war (Feb 2022) disrupted global fertiliser supply chains; Russia and Belarus are top global potash producers; India began diversifying suppliers at scale. [S2]
- 2023–24: India locked in long-term supply agreements with Saudi Arabia, Oman, and OCP (Morocco) to reduce spot-market exposure. [S2]
- FY 2025–26: India dramatically scaled imports — urea imports rose to 8–9 million tonnes (vs 5.6 mt prior year); DAP imports rose to 7 million tonnes (vs 4.5 mt). [S3]
- March 2026: India confirmed locking in 2.5 million tonnes of fertiliser from Morocco for 2025–26 season. [S2]
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
- Fertiliser subsidies form one of India's largest non-plan expenditure items (~₹1.6–1.8 lakh crore annually in recent years); global price spikes directly inflate the subsidy burden. [S3]
- Urea price rise of 60% in 2026 would significantly increase the cost of the food subsidy-fertiliser subsidy nexus — compressing fiscal space. [S3]
- DAP price surge (above $600/tonne) raises input costs for farmers, particularly for wheat and rice, affecting farm income and food inflation. [S2]
- Russia deal provides rupee-payment advantages (given India-Russia trade settlement mechanisms post-2022 sanctions), potentially easing forex outgo. [S4]
Geopolitical / Strategic
- Russia: India's engagement ignores Western sanctions, reinforcing India's strategic autonomy doctrine; Russia emerged as India's top fertiliser supplier (~25% share). [S2]
- Belarus: sanctioned by EU/US over political repression (2020 Lukashenko crisis); India's continued engagement signals non-alignment with Western pressure on potash sourcing. [S2]
- Morocco: controls >70% of world's rock phosphate — India's partnership with OCP Group (Morocco's state phosphate company) is a long-term structural food-security hedge. [S2]
- Middle East (Strait of Hormuz): any conflict escalation could cut ~50% of India's fertiliser import corridor — strategic imperative to diversify simultaneously. [S1][S3]
- China export quotas: China weaponises fertiliser exports via quota system; India's diversification away from China for urea is a de-risking strategy. [S3]
Environmental
- Heavy dependence on urea contributes to soil degradation (N imbalance, reduced organic matter), groundwater nitrate pollution, and GHG emissions (N₂O). [S4]
- India's over-reliance on urea (kept cheapest by subsidies) distorts the NPK ratio — ideal is 4:2:1 (N:P:K); actual ratio is highly skewed toward N. [S4]
- Morocco and Belarus supply phosphate and potash — correcting NPK imbalance could improve soil health if pricing signals change. [S4]
Administrative
- Dual subsidy channel: P&K fertilisers under NBS are market-priced (with fixed subsidy per nutrient); urea under statutory control creates chronic allocation distortions. [S4]
- Just-in-time import model exposes India to seasonal price spikes; talks with Russia/Belarus/Morocco aim to shift toward long-term bilateral agreements (LTAs). [S2]
- Port and storage infrastructure for bulk fertiliser handling (especially DAP, MOP) at JNPT, Paradip, Vishakhapatnam is a logistical bottleneck. [S4]
Historical
- Post-1973 oil shock, India established its own urea plants to reduce import dependence — but P&K deposits were absent domestically.
- 2008 global food crisis: fertiliser prices tripled, exposing India's vulnerability; led to push for New Investment Policy for urea plants (2012, revised 2015).
- 2021–22: Global fertiliser crisis following Russian invasion of Ukraine; India faced acute shortage; emergency imports from Canada, Jordan, and China. [S2]
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- FY 2025–26 (Apr–Nov 2025): Urea imports surged to 8–9 mt (up from 5.6 mt); DAP imports hit 7 mt (up from 4.5 mt). [S3]
- 2025: India entered long-term supply agreements with Middle East, African countries, and Russia as a post-Ukraine-war supply-chain restructuring. [S3]
- Early 2026: China did not issue urea export quotas for 2026, tightening global supply. [S3]
- March 2026: India confirmed 2.5 mt fertiliser deal with Morocco (OCP Group) for FY26. [S2]
- March 20, 2026: Reports of active negotiations with Russia, Belarus, and Morocco ahead of Kharif 2026 season. [S1]
- March 2026: Urea inventory up 10.7% YoY; DAP stocks more than doubled — suggesting India's aggressive pre-stocking strategy. [S2]
- World Bank (2026): Projects urea prices to rise ~60% in 2026; MOP +12% in 2026. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)
- India imports urea, DAP (diammonium phosphate), and MOP (muriate of potash) as its three primary fertiliser imports. [S1]
- LNG (liquefied natural gas) is the key feedstock for urea production in India. [S1]
- The Middle East accounts for roughly 50% of India's DAP and urea imports. [S1]
- Russia accounts for approximately 25% of India's total fertiliser imports — making it India's top single fertiliser supplier. [S2]
- Morocco holds over 70% of the world's known rock phosphate reserves; its state entity is OCP Group. [S2]
- Belarus is a major producer of potash (MOP — muriate of potash), a key fertiliser for potassium. [S2]
- China controls fertiliser exports via a quota system; as of March 2026, China had not issued urea export quotas for 2026. [S3]
- Urea prices projected to rise ~60% in 2026 per World Bank projections, before easing in 2027. [S3]
- India's DAP imports in FY26 reached 7 million tonnes (up from 4.5 mt YoY). [S3]
- The Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) Scheme (2010) covers P&K fertilisers; urea remains under statutory price control. [S4]
- The Strait of Hormuz disruption risk is the primary geopolitical chokepoint for India's fertiliser import routes from the Middle East. [S3]
- India's Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers (Department of Fertilizers) is the nodal implementing ministry for fertiliser policy. [S4]
- 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]
- 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:
-
"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)
-
"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)
-
"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
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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
- [S1] India in talks with Russia, Belarus, Morocco to boost fertiliser imports — The Hindu / Business Recorder — https://www.brecorder.com/news/40412386/india-in-talks-with-russia-belarus-morocco-to-boost-fertiliser-imports-sources-say — (Tier 4)
- [S2] India to Seek Fertilisers from Russia, Belarus, Morocco Amid Global Supply Risks — Outlook Business / Global Banking & Finance — https://www.globalbankingandfinance.com/india-talks-russia-belarus-morocco-boost-fertiliser-imports/ — (Tier 4)
- [S3] Fertilizer prices surge as Strait of Hormuz disruptions tighten supplies — World Bank Blogs — https://blogs.worldbank.org/en/opendata/fertilizer-prices-surge-as-strait-of-hormuz-disruptions-tighten- — (Tier 2)
- [S4] India Diversifies Fertiliser Imports Amid West Asia Tensions to Secure Kharif Crop Supply — Fertilizer Field / Tribune India — https://fertilizerfield.com/india-fertiliser-imports-diversification-kharif/ — (Tier 4); supplemented by article excerpt from The Hindu (March 20, 2026, p. 12, International Edition) — (Tier 4)