India to Import Urea at Significantly Lower Prices, Easing Subsidy Burden
L'essentiel
- India is set to import urea at nearly half the price it paid previously, following a sharp decline in global rates after the West Asia crisis.
- This development is expected to ease pressure on the country's fertilizer subsidy bill.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
India is a major importer of urea, a critical fertilizer for its agriculture. Recent global price spikes, exacerbated by the West Asia crisis, had increased the country's fertilizer subsidy bill. The government sells urea to farmers at heavily subsidized rates, making it sensitive to global price fluctuations.
New Delhi: India is likely to import urea at nearly half the price it paid after the West Asia crisis began, in what could help contain further pressure on the country's fertiliser subsidy bill.
A tender for 1.7 million tonnes of urea, issued by National Fertilizers Ltd on May 27, received bids in the range of $444-605 per tonne, a sharp decline from the earlier purchase price of $959 per tonne, said people aware of the matter. More than three dozen bidders participated in the tender.
The lower bids reflect an easing of global urea prices in May after a sharp spike triggered by the start of the Iran war on February 28. Several importing countries had deferred urea purchases after prices surged and shifted to cheaper nitrogen fertiliser alternatives, helping stabilise demand.
China, which had earlier restricted fertiliser exports, also issued some export quotas in recent weeks. This helped improve global availability and temper prices of nitrogenous fertiliser, said industry executives.
Softer fertiliser prices are crucial for India-the world's largest urea importer. Urea is also the most widely used soil nutrient in the country, accounting for about 45% of total fertiliser consumption. It is generally applied soon after sowing, around the end of June, making timely availability critical for the kharif season.
India has procured around 40% of its annual urea import requirement at nearly double the pre-crisis price. Any further purchases at lower rates could help prevent a sharper increase in the fertiliser subsidy bill, which is already expected to exceed the budgeted estimate of ₹1.77 lakh crore.
The government sells urea to farmers at heavily subsidised rates, with farmers paying only a small fraction of the actual cost. As a result, any rise in global prices directly increases the subsidy burden on the exchequer.
The West Asia crisis had disrupted supplies of liquefied natural gas, a key input for domestic urea production. This affected output in March, just ahead of the main planting season, raising concerns over availability during peak demand.
The government has since revised its kharif requirement estimates. Urea requirement for the season has been reduced to 19 million tonnes from 19.4 million tonnes, while the requirement for di-ammonium phosphate has been lowered to 6 million tonnes from 6.6 million tonnes.
The agriculture ministry has also started a campaign to encourage farmers to reduce the use of bulk fertilisers from June, citing the need to protect soil health and lower dependence on imports. The move follows PM Narendra Modi's appeal to farmers to cut chemical fertiliser use by 50% to improve soil health and curb import dependence amid elevated global prices and concerns over possible supply tightness ahead of the kharif sowing season.
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
India will continue to import urea at prices significantly lower than the pre-crisis levels.
Probable · Moyen terme
The fertilizer subsidy bill for India will remain within or closer to the budgeted estimate of ₹1.77 lakh crore.
Probable · Court terme
Questions ouvertes
- Will the lower import prices be sustained in future tenders?
- What is the exact impact of the reduced urea requirement on overall agricultural output?
- How effective will the campaign to reduce chemical fertilizer use be?
- What are the specific implications of the West Asia crisis on domestic urea production inputs?