Relevance: GS-3 (Agriculture, Indian Economy, Environment) | Source: The Hindu
1. The Core Issue (News in Brief)
Global crises have pushed India’s annual fertilizer subsidy to a massive ₹2 lakh crore.
- The Problem: Over 66% of these subsidized chemical fertilizers are wasted. They fail to absorb into the crops and instead cause severe environmental pollution.
- The Need: India must urgently shift from “increasing supply” to “reducing demand” by teaching farmers to use fertilizers more efficiently.
2. India’s Fertilizer Vulnerabilities
- Urea (Nitrogenous): India makes 80% of its urea locally. However, this is risky because the factories rely heavily on imported natural gas.
- Phosphatic Fertilizers (DAP/NPK): India has almost no domestic reserves of mineral rock phosphate. As a result, we are forced to import nearly 100% of our phosphatic fertilizer needs.
- The Fiscal Drain: To protect farmers from high global prices, the government pays heavy subsidies, straining the national budget.
3. The “Fertilizer Trap” (The Cycle of Degradation)
Indian agriculture is stuck in a dangerous cycle:
- Soil Damage: Overusing chemical fertilizers destroys the soil’s natural organic matter, stripping its ability to hold water and nutrients.
- Forced Overuse: To get the same crop yield on this damaged soil, farmers are forced to apply even more fertilizer the next season.
- Environmental Harm: Unused Urea escapes into the air as ammonia gas (air pollution). Excess phosphates wash into rivers, causing eutrophication (water pollution that kills aquatic life).
4. Why Policies are Failing
- Urea is excluded from NBS: The Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) scheme was meant to promote balanced fertilizer use. It failed because Urea was kept out of its pricing rules, keeping its price artificially cheap.
- MSP Bias: The government largely procures only Rice, Wheat, and Sugarcane at Minimum Support Prices (MSP). These are “nutrient-guzzling” crops that consume two-thirds of India’s total urea.
- Loss of Crop Rotation: Because of the MSP bias toward cereals, farmers have abandoned the traditional practice of growing pulses (legumes), which naturally heal the soil.
5. UPSC Value Box: Key Schemes & Concepts
- PM PRANAM Scheme: A national initiative that financially rewards State governments for reducing chemical fertilizer use and promoting bio-friendly alternatives.
- Dalhan Aatmanirbharta Mission: A strategic mission to massively scale up domestic pulse production, which will naturally reduce urea demand.
- Biochar: A carbon-rich residue (made from burnt farm waste) that acts as an excellent natural soil conditioner to retain moisture and nutrients.
6. The Administrative Solutions
- Incentivize Pulses (Legumes): Pulses naturally fix atmospheric nitrogen into the soil. Promoting them can reduce urea dependence by up to 90% for that crop cycle.
- Change Application Rules: Extension workers must train farmers to use organic manure as the main soil base, using chemical fertilizers strictly as a minor top-up.
- Smarter Seed Research: Direct research funds toward developing native crop varieties that possess high “nitrogen-use efficiency” (giving high yields with very little fertilizer).
Consider the following statements regarding the fertilizer sector and related government initiatives in India:
- India is completely self-sufficient in the domestic production of mineral rock phosphate required for phosphatic fertilizers.
- The Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) scheme currently covers all chemical fertilizers, including Urea, to promote balanced fertilization.
- The PM PRANAM scheme aims to incentivize States to promote alternative fertilizers and the balanced use of chemical fertilizers.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 3 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 2 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Correct Answer: (a) 3 only
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