Parliamentary panel warns of fertilizer shortage


Parliamentary Panel Warns of Fertilizer Shortage — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Warning issued by Parliamentary Standing Committee on Chemicals and Fertilisers [S1]
Committee Chair Azad Kirti Jha (Trinamool Congress MP) [S1]
Trigger Kharif 2026 season onset; West Asia tensions [S1]
Ministry Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers (Dept. of Fertilizers)
Key law Fertilizer (Control) Order, 1985 (under Essential Commodities Act, 1955)
Subsidy scheme (urea) Urea Subsidy Scheme — Maximum Retail Price (MRP) fixed at ₹242/bag (45 kg) since 2012
Subsidy scheme (P&K) Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) — per-kg subsidy fixed seasonally by Cabinet
Urea import share ~22% of total requirement imported [S3]
DAP import share ~52% of requirement imported [S3]
Urea from GCC countries ~75% of all imported urea sourced from GCC (Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain) [S3]
LNG from West Asia ~86% of LNG used by Indian fertilizer plants originates from West Asia [S3]
Total fertilizer reserves (March 2026) ~177.31 LMT (up 36.5% YoY from 129.85 LMT in March 2025) [S2]
Urea stock (March 2026) ~62 lakh MT; DAP ~25 lakh MT [S3]
Global urea price (post-conflict) ~$700/tonne; DAP ~$750–770/tonne [S3]
Domestic urea production loss ~30,000–35,000 tonnes/day estimated [S3]
NBS Kharif 2026 Approved by Cabinet for P&K fertilizers (Apr 1 – Sep 30, 2026) [S4]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Agricultural / Food Security

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Administrative / Governance

Legal / Constitutional


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Parliamentary Standing Committee warning on fertilizer shortage (March 2026) was led by Azad Kirti Jha, a Trinamool Congress MP. [S1]
  2. India imports approximately 22% of its urea and ~52% of its DAP requirements. [S3]
  3. Approximately 75% of India's imported urea comes from GCC countries (Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain). [S3]
  4. About 86% of LNG used by Indian fertilizer plants originates from West Asia. [S3]
  5. Urea MRP has been fixed at ₹242 per 45-kg bag since 2012, regardless of global price movements.
  6. Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) Scheme (launched 2010) covers P&K fertilizers; urea is governed separately under the Urea Subsidy Scheme.
  7. The Fertilizer (Control) Order derives authority from Section 3 of the Essential Commodities Act, 1955. [S2]
  8. Neem coating of urea was made mandatory (100%) to prevent diversion to non-agricultural uses — notified in 2015.
  9. India's total fertilizer reserves stood at 177.31 LMT in March 2026, up 36.5% year-on-year. [S2]
  10. Global urea prices rose to approximately $700/tonne due to the West Asia conflict, against pre-conflict levels of ~$450–500. [S3]
  11. The West Asia conflict is estimated to have cut India's daily domestic urea production by 30,000–35,000 tonnes. [S3]
  12. NBS rates are approved seasonally by the Cabinet — separately for Kharif (Apr–Sep) and Rabi (Oct–Mar) seasons. [S4]
  13. The Standing Committee on Chemicals and Fertilisers (not Agriculture) has jurisdiction over fertilizer policy in Parliament. [S1][S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS-II: Parliament and Parliamentary Committees; Government policies and interventions; Transparency and accountability.

GS-III: Food security; Agriculture — subsidies and support systems; Economic geography (import dependence); Infrastructure — supply chains.

Syllabus Headings: "Issues related to direct and indirect farm subsidies"; "Food processing and related industries"; "Effects of liberalization on the economy, changes in industrial policy and their effects on industrial growth."

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Chemicals and Fertilisers has warned of an acute fertilizer shortage ahead of Kharif 2026, citing West Asia tensions. Critically analyse India's structural vulnerabilities in fertilizer supply chains and suggest a forward-looking strategy." (GS-III, 15 marks)

  2. "India's fertilizer subsidy architecture — anchored in fixed MRPs and the NBS scheme — is poorly equipped to handle geopolitical supply shocks. Comment." (GS-III, 10 marks)

  3. "Examine the role of Parliamentary Standing Committees in holding the executive accountable in the domain of agricultural inputs. How effective has oversight been in the case of fertilizer policy?" (GS-II, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) Scheme Direct policy instrument for P&K fertilizer pricing; reform debates ongoing
Urea Subsidy and DBT in Fertilizers MRP fixation, neem coating, and Aadhaar-linked distribution — exam staple
Essential Commodities Act, 1955 and 2020 Amendment Legal backbone of fertilizer regulation; 2020 amendment removed fertilizers — then reinstated
PM PRANAM Scheme PM Programme for Restoration, Awareness, Nourishment and Amelioration of Mother Earth — promotes alternative fertilizers
India's LNG Import Dependency West Asia provides ~86% of LNG for fertilizer plants — overlaps with energy security
Strait of Hormuz and Red Sea Disruptions Geopolitical chokepoints affecting India's imports beyond fertilizers
Soil Health Card Scheme Rationalizing fertilizer use; connects to balanced NPK application concern raised by the committee
India-GCC Trade Relations GCC countries are the dominant urea source; relates to India-GCC FTA negotiations

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong Ministry: Fertilizer policy is under the Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers (Department of Fertilizers), not Ministry of Agriculture. The Parliamentary committee is on Chemicals and Fertilisers, not Agriculture. [S1]

  2. NBS ≠ Universal: NBS applies to P&K fertilizers only. Urea is governed under a separate Urea Subsidy Scheme with a fixed MRP — it is NOT under NBS. Aspirants often conflate the two.

  3. Import figure confusion: India imports ~22% of urea but ~52% of DAP. These are frequently swapped. Potash (MOP) import dependence is even higher (~100%). [S3]

  4. Committee composition trap: The warning was by the Standing Committee on Chemicals and Fertilisers, chaired by a Trinamool Congress MP — not a BJP or Congress member. Party affiliation and committee name are testable. [S1]

  5. "No Shortage" vs. "Warning of Shortage": PIB press releases simultaneously assert adequate stock (177.31 LMT, 36.5% YoY increase) while the Parliamentary committee warns of an acute shortage — students must distinguish between government PR and legislative oversight findings. Both can be simultaneously true if distribution is uneven or if the crisis is prospective. [S2][S1]


11. Sources