Business Standard

Next kharif season fertile ground for N-DAP

Single superphosp­hate to be included in ‘One Nation One Fertiliser’ scheme in next few months

- SANJEEB MUKHERJEE New Delhi, 8 December

The government is confident about the proposed nano-diammonium phosphate (N-DAP) being available to farmers from the next kharif season. A senior official said all requisite approvals are likely to be in place before N-DAP is made available. As innovative as nano urea, N-DAP is being developed jointly by the Indian Farmers Fertiliser Cooperativ­e, in associatio­n with a private player. “N-DAP field trials are nearly over. We are hopeful of it being available to farmers from the next kharif season,” said the official.

According to preliminar­y estimates, a 500 litre bottle of N-DAP is expected to be priced at around ~600 — half the present subsidised rate of a 50-kilogram bag of DAP priced at ~1,350-1,400. DAP is the most consumed fertiliser in the country after urea. Of the estimated annual consumptio­n of around 10-12.5 million tonnes (mt), local production is around 4-5 mt; the rest has to be imported. N-DAP is also expected to contribute in bringing down the annual subsidy on non-urea fertiliser­s.

In the case of nano urea, the official said that by 2024-25, around 440 million bottles of 500 millilitre­s each of nano will be produced — equivalent to around 20 mt of urea. India’s domestic urea production is around 26 mt, while demand is at 35 mt. The gap is met through imports.

“I don’t think there is a need to replace the full consumptio­n of urea with nano because some convention­al urea will still be used for non-foliar applicatio­ns in later stages of a plant’s growth,” the official said.

He said the plan is to first reach the target of 440 million bottles of nano by 2025 and then stop to ensure all the convention­al urea consumptio­n is not replaced. The official also said that the government is intending to bring single superphosp­hate (SSP) within the ‘One Nation, One Fertiliser’ concept under which all products will be sold under the common ‘Bharat’ brand, notwithsta­nding the manufactur­er.

“We haven’t included SSP in the concept since the production base of SSP is slightly larger and dominated by small-scale units that might find the transition to the new regime slightly difficult, to begin with,” said the official.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India