NAAS Brainstorming: Roadmap for Atmanirbharta in Fertilizers

National Academy of Agricultural Sciences (NAAS) organised a Brainstorming Session (BSS) to develop a roadmap for achieving Atmanirbharta (self-reliance) in fertilizers, with participation from government departments, academia, fertilizer industry and farmers.

India’s Fertilizer Sector: Current Status & Challenges

  • Total fertilizer (N+P₂O₅+K₂O) consumption: 93 million tonnes in 2024-25
  • Fertilizer use intensity: 151 kg/ha
  • Fertilizer consumption ratio: 3:3.5:1– highly skewed towards Nitrogen (N)
  • Fertilizer subsidy burden: ~Rs 1.71 lakh crore in 2024-25
  • ~80% of natural gas used in urea production is imported
  • India remains heavily import-dependent for Phosphorus (P) and Potassium (K)
Low Nutrient Use Efficiency (NUE):
  • Crops utilise only 30–50% of applied Nitrogen, 15–25% of Phosphorus and 50–60% of Potassium
  • Remainder lost through leaching, runoff, volatilisation or soil fixation causing soil and water degradation

Key Recommendations from Session

Multi-Pronged Strategy with Short, Medium and Long-Term R&D Goals:
  • Development of smart alternate fertilizers
  • Utilisation of unexploited indigenous minerals– Glauconite, Phosphate rocks, Mica, Polyhalite
  • Use of industrial by-products as nutrient sources
  • Increased use of biologicals and exploiting soil microbiome potential
  • Improved composting techniques
  • Crop breeding for enhanced Nutrient Use Efficiency (NUE)
  • Precision nutrient management integrating fertilizers and organics
  • Soil health restoration, crop diversification and residue recycling
Mission Mode Programme: INSAM:
  • Launch of a dedicated mission for Integrated Nutrient Supply and Management (INSAM)
  • Goal: replace at least 25% of current mineral fertilizer use with organic manures in the next 3 years
  • Aggressive technology transfer using AI platform Bharat VISTAAR for large-scale digital outreach

Strategic Significance

  • Recent West Asia developments are a wake-up call to rethink India’s fertilizer import dependence
  • Self-reliance in fertilizers is critical for food security, fiscal sustainability and agricultural resilience
  • Strengthening extension services to focus on efficient fertilizer use rather than merely increasing consumption

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