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NEW DELHI (Reuters): India is boosting fertiliser imports from nations including Canada and Israel to ensure sufficient supplies for the coming summer sowing season after the disruption of shipments caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
India is a leading importer of fertilisers for its huge agriculture sector, which employs about 60% of the country’s workforce and accounts for 15% of the $ 2.7 trillion economy.
“This time we have made advance preparations for kharif (summer-sown crop) season. We need about 30 million tonnes of fertilisers and arrangements are in place,” Fertiliser Minister Mansukh Mandaviya told Reuters, without elaborating.
He said India will have a comfortable opening stock, about a quarter of the overall amount of fertilisers needed for the summer season.
Indian farmers usually start planting crops including rice, cotton, and soybean with the arrival of monsoon rains in June.
To fertilise the crops, India depends on imports for its entire annual consumption of 4 million to 5 million tonnes of potash and ships in a third of this from Belarus and Russia.
Landlocked Belarus uses ports in Russia and Lithuania for its exports.
Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, shipping routes have been closed off and western sanctions on Moscow, which has described its actions in Ukraine as a “special military operation”, have made it difficult to trade with Russian and Belarusian companies.
Indian Potash Ltd (IPL) has increased imports from Canada, Israel, and Jordan.
It will buy 1.2 million tonnes of Potash from Canada, 600,000 tonnes from Israel, and 300,000 from Jordan in 2022 to partly replace supply from Russia and Belarus, numerous sources said.
A senior industry official who declined to be named said IPL was trying to ensure that “a substantial amount of shipments” arrive before June to prevent any shortage during the sowing season.
India was close to signing a three-year fertiliser import deal with Russia during Mandaviya’s visit to Moscow planned for this month. The visit was postponed following the Ukraine invasion, which began on 24 Feb.
One of the sources said India may try again to sign the deal “when the situation improves”.
Traditionally India has used prices struck in deals with Belarus and Russia as the benchmark for supplies from other countries.
By 2022, Canada has emerged as a price setter, the sources said. IPL is buying potash from companies in Canada and Israel at $ 590 per tonne on a delivered basis with six months of credit in 2022. IPL declined to comment.
India also relies on Russia and Belarus for complex fertilisers that provide more than one crop nutrient.
To help make up for any lost supplies of nitrogen, phosphate, and potash, Indian companies are also increasing supplies from Saudi Arabia and Morocco, the sources said.