Context:
India is the second-largest consumer of fertilisers globally. Despite increased domestic production, 30% of fertilisers are still imported, making India vulnerable to global supply shocks, especially during geopolitical conflicts or trade disruptions.
Key Challenges Highlighted
Overuse and Imbalance
- Average fertiliser use: 141.2 kg/hectare (NPK)
- Current N:P:K usage ratio: 6.7:2.7:1 (vs. recommended 4:2:1)
- Overuse of Nitrogen (N): 67.5%
- Overuse of Phosphorus (P): 35%
Low Fertiliser Use Efficiency
- Nitrogen: 30–35%
- Phosphorus: 15–20%
- Potassium: 50–60%
This implies a significant share of nutrients is lost, contributing to soil degradation, groundwater contamination, and climate change through nitrous oxide emissions.
Financial Burden
- FY24 Fertiliser Subsidy: ₹1.75 lakh crore
- Urea alone: ₹1.31 lakh crore
- Current subsidy regime incentivizes overuse of urea, discouraging balanced nutrient application.
Global Comparison
- India mirrors China’s pre-2015 fertiliser subsidy mistakes, which led to overapplication and environmental degradation.
Recommendations for a New Fertiliser Policy
- Soil Health and Balanced Nutrition
- Promote bio-fertilisers and nano-fertilisers
- Encourage crop-specific fertiliser use based on soil health cards
- Farmer Education & Capacity Building
- Awareness on overuse hazards and benefits of balanced fertilisation
- Use of mobile-based advisory services, field demos, and training
- Technological Integration
- Adoption of:
- AI & Machine Learning
- Remote Sensing & GIS
- Blockchain for traceability and subsidy disbursement
- Adoption of:
- Attract Youth & Startups
- Innovation grants for agri-entrepreneurs
- Startups in smart fertilisation and precision agriculture
- CSR Alignment
- Align Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) funds toward agri-education and sustainable nutrient practices
- Fertiliser Subsidy Reforms
- Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) to farmers, not manufacturers
- Supply based on landholding, soil type, crop need
- Incentivise farmers for soil health-based practices
- Reduce Import Dependency
- Boost domestic fertiliser production
- Develop alternative nutrient sources using indigenous resources