India's Fertiliser Crisis: Time To Shift To High Nutrient Efficiency For Food Security & Long-Term GDP Growth

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India’s fertiliser import dependence amid global disruptions risks food security and high costs. High NUE fertilisers could cut imports 40–50%, raise yields 15–40%, save subsidies, and boost GDP.

A farmer applying fertiliser to crops in his field
India's Fertiliser Crisis: Time To Shift To High Nutrient Efficiency For Food Security & Long-Term GDP Growth

India, the world's largest consumer of fertilisers, faces mounting challenges from its heavy reliance on imported NPK (Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Potassium) fertilisers amid global supply chain disruptions. With annual subsidy spending exceeding ₹2.5 lakh crore (over $30 billion) and ongoing geopolitical tensions like the Russia-Ukraine & Middle East wars, the nation risks food insecurity and stunted agricultural growth. Local High Nutrient Use Efficiency (High NUE) fertilisers offer a game-changing alternative, delivering higher crop yields, better soil health, and a pathway to boost India's agricultural GDP by at least 2-3% annually.

India imports a sizeable quantity of its ammonia, which is a basic raw material for manufacturing urea. The Middle East war and the blockage of the Hormuz Strait suddenly disrupted supplies of this basic raw material. India also imports over 25% of its urea and a significant portion of phosphates and all potash, primarily from Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine—sources crippled by the ongoing war. Sanctions and logistics breakdowns have caused fertiliser prices to surge 150-200% since 2022, inflating India's import bill to ₹3.4 lakh crore in FY 2024-25 alone. Domestic production covers only 80% of urea needs, leaving the country vulnerable to localised supply imbalances that impacted kharif crop yields by an estimated 5-10% in some affected regions last year.

While government subsidies actively support the agricultural sector, they represent a significant fiscal allocation. Furthermore, optimising traditional NPK fertiliser application is essential, as conventional methods can lead to nutrient loss through environmental leaching and runoff. Enhancing nutrient efficiency is therefore critical to safeguarding groundwater and long-term soil fertility.

High NUE fertilisers, developed and manufactured in India through advanced technologies, can reduce or replace 25% to 50% of the traditional bulk NPK or water-soluble fertilisers while increasing yields by 15% to 40%. Field trials by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) show that the use of balanced nutrition with high NUE fertilisers carrying secondary and micronutrients can not only increase yield and reduce the recommended dose of fertilisers but also enhance soil microbial activity, improve biofortification of essential nutrients, reduce greenhouse gas emissions & foster sustainable farming.

Adopting High NUE solutions locally could slash import dependence by 40%-50% within five years, save ₹50,000-75,000 crore in subsidies annually, and propel agricultural GDP growth. Experts project a cascading multiplier effect: every 1% yield increase adds ₹15,000 crore to farm incomes, stimulating rural demand and national economic output.

Amidst ongoing global supply chain pressures, mitigating the risk of food shortages and inflation remains a top priority. Any significant reduction in food productivity could have cascading effects on various other industries, including food processing, agri-inputs, biofuels, energy, and textiles. Some economic analysts warn that prolonged supply disruptions could exert downward pressure on overall GDP growth.

Indian companies are scaling production of indigenous High NUE products, partnering with farmers for nationwide adoption. These high NUE products are not dependent on imported ammonia, potash or phosphorous. This shift promises food security for 1.4 billion people and positions India as a global leader in sustainable agriculture with self-reliance, making Indian agriculture Atmanirbhar.

Instead of just ensuring food productivity and fertiliser availability during the present Middle East war, India can make a quantum leap in agricultural productivity and total GDP growth if we shift attention to balanced nutrition through high nutrient efficiency fertilisers which are made in India. A radical shift in practice and recommendation to adopt balanced nutrition from secondary and micronutrient high Nutrient Using efficient fertilisers for all states and KVKs from the government of India can not only help us in the shortages in the near term but also strengthen agricultural productivity, farmer income, agricultural exports, allied industrial growth and national GDP, One Health, and Atmanirbhar Bharat in the long term while saving top subsidy dollars for the nation.

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the publisher. While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information, the publisher is not responsible for any errors or omissions, or for the results obtained from the use of this information.

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