Ahead of kharif season, India stares at fertilizer shortage


India's Fertilizer Shortage Ahead of Kharif Season

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1944 Fertilizer Association of India established (pre-independence industry body).
1957 Fertilizer (Control) Order, 1957 — foundational legislation regulating quality, price, and movement of fertilizers.
1977 Urea MRP statutorily fixed; subsidy routed to manufacturers.
1991 Economic liberalisation: P&K fertilizers de-controlled; urea retained under statutory pricing.
2010 Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) Scheme introduced for P&K fertilizers (not urea).
2018 Urea MRP last revised — ₹242 per 45 kg bag (exclusive of neem charges and taxes); unchanged since. [S2][S3]
2021–23 Russia-Ukraine war spikes global fertilizer prices; India negotiates bilateral supply deals with Russia, Egypt, Morocco, Canada.
2022 100% neem coating of urea mandated to curb diversion to non-agricultural uses.
2023–24 5 new urea plants revived under Atmanirbhar Bharat; indigenous urea capacity rises to 283.74 Lakh MT per annum (LMTPA). [S3]
2024–25 Domestic urea production: 306.67 LMT; import projection for 2026–27: ≈85 LMT. [S4]
2026 Kharif-eve shortage warning; Parliamentary panel recommends 'Fertilizer Supply Security Fund'. [S4]

4. Core Static Facts

A. Key Fertilizers - Urea (N): Most-used nitrogen fertilizer; MRP capped at ₹242/45 kg bag (since 2018). [S2] - DAP (Di-Ammonium Phosphate — 18% N + 46% P₂O₅): Second most-used; ~60% imported. [S1][S2] - NPK (compound fertilizers — varied grades): ~90% domestically produced. [S2] - MOP (Muriate of Potash): 100% imported (India has no potash reserves). [S2] - SSP (Single Super Phosphate): Manufactured domestically; important for small farmers.

B. Subsidy Architecture | Fertilizer | Subsidy Mechanism | Regulator | |---|---|---| | Urea | Statutory MRP; subsidy to manufacturer/importer (difference between farm-gate cost and MRP) | Department of Fertilizers | | P&K (DAP, NPK, MOP, SSP, etc.) | Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) Scheme (fixed ₹/nutrient) — NOT MRP controlled | Department of Fertilizers |

C. Production & Import Data (2024-25) - Domestic urea production: 306.67 LMT [S4] - Projected urea imports (2026-27): ≈85 LMT [S4] - Indigenous urea capacity: 283.74 LMTPA [S3] - India secured 86 LMT of fertilizers via global bilateral pacts (2025-26). [S3] - Domestic P&K production: 211 LMT [S3]

D. Institutional Framework - Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Chemicals & Fertilizers → Department of Fertilizers (headed in 2026 by J.P. Nadda as Union Minister). [S4] - Enabling legislation: Fertilizer (Control) Order, 1957; Essential Commodities Act, 1955. - Parliamentary oversight: Parliamentary Standing Committee on Chemicals & Fertilizers.


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Administrative

Scientific / Technological


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. MRP of urea (45 kg bag) has been frozen at ₹242 (exclusive of neem coating charges and taxes) since March 1, 2018. [S2]
  2. MOP (Muriate of Potash) is 100% imported — India has no domestic potash reserves. [S2]
  3. The Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) Scheme (2010) covers P&K fertilizers but excludes urea, which is under statutory MRP. [S2][S3]
  4. India's domestic urea production in 2024-25 was 306.67 LMT; projected imports for 2026-27 are ≈85 LMT. [S4]
  5. Indigenous urea installed capacity under Atmanirbhar Bharat: 283.74 LMTPA. [S3]
  6. India secured 86 LMT of fertilizers through global bilateral agreements and domestic P&K production reached 211 LMT. [S3]
  7. The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Fertilizers (2026) is chaired by TMC MP Azad Kirti Jha. [S4]
  8. Fertilizer subsidy is released via DBT only upon point-of-sale (PoS) machine-recorded transactions at the retail level (since 2018). [S3]
  9. 100% neem coating of urea is mandatory (to curb diversion to non-agricultural uses and slow nitrogen release). [S3]
  10. DAP composition: 18% Nitrogen + 46% Phosphorus (P₂O₅) — most concentrated phosphate fertilizer used in India. [S2]
  11. Special DAP one-time package (2024-25): ₹3,500/MT beyond NBS rates for April–December 2024. [S2]
  12. The fertilizer sector has been classified under 'Priority Sector-2' for natural gas allocation under the Natural Gas (Supply Regulation) Order, 2026. [S1]
  13. Department of Fertilizers falls under the Ministry of Chemicals and Fertilizers (not the Ministry of Agriculture). [S3]
  14. Final budget allocation to the Department of Fertilizers: ₹1,91,836.29 crore. [S3]
  15. The Strait of Hormuz disruption (Iran-linked tensions, 2026) is the proximate geopolitical trigger for India's Kharif 2026 fertilizer supply risk. [S1][S4]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: Primarily GS-III Syllabus headings: - Indian Economy → Agriculture → Subsidies, food security - Government Budgeting → Subsidy rationalization - Internal Security / Geopolitics → Supply chain vulnerability

Also touches: GS-II (Parliamentary committees, federalism in agriculture)

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "India's fertilizer subsidy regime, while protecting farmers from global price shocks, creates long-term structural vulnerabilities. Critically examine with reference to recent developments." (GS-III, 250 words) 2. "Assess the strategic implications of India's near-total import dependence for potash (MOP) and phosphatic fertilizers in the context of evolving geopolitical tensions in West Asia." (GS-III, 250 words) 3. "The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Fertilizers has recommended a 'Fertilizer Supply Security Fund'. Evaluate this recommendation in the context of India's food security architecture." (GS-II/III, 150 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) Scheme Core policy instrument for P&K fertilizers; often confused with urea subsidy mechanism
PM PRANAM Scheme Promotes alternative fertilizers (nano-urea, bio-fertilizers) to reduce chemical fertilizer dependence
Atmanirbhar Bharat in Agriculture Revival of urea plants; self-reliance in critical agricultural inputs
Strait of Hormuz & India's Energy Security India's LNG and fertilizer imports are directly routed through this chokepoint
Essential Commodities Act, 1955 Enables government control over fertilizer production, distribution, and pricing
India's Food Security Architecture (National Food Security Act, 2013) Fertilizer availability → crop production → PDS buffer stocks: the full chain
DBT in Fertilizers Governance reform reducing subsidy leakage; linked to JAM Trinity
India's Bilateral Trade Agreements (Morocco, Russia, Canada) Sourcing of phosphate and potash; geopolitical dimensions of supply security

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry: Fertilizers are under the Ministry of Chemicals & Fertilizers — NOT the Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare. Aspirants frequently misattribute this.
  2. NBS ≠ Urea subsidy: NBS covers P&K fertilizers only; urea remains under a separate statutory MRP mechanism. Confusing the two is a common MCQ trap.
  3. DAP import share: Approximately 60% of DAP is imported, not 100%. MOP is the fertilizer that is 100% imported.
  4. Neem-coating purpose: Often misidentified as purely an environmental measure; its primary stated purpose is to curb diversion of subsidised urea to non-agricultural (industrial) uses.
  5. 'Kharif' timing: Kharif begins June–July (sowing), not January; peak fertilizer demand is April–June (pre-sowing input procurement). Questions sometimes test whether aspirants know that the supply crunch precedes the season, not coincides with harvest.

11. Sources