Millennium Post

India to immediatel­y supply 65,000 MT of urea to Lanka

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COLOMBO: India has assured Sri Lanka to immediatel­y supply 65,000 metric tonnes of urea to avoid any disruption in paddy cultivatio­n in this country, as it faces the worst economic crisis in its postindepe­ndence history.

High Commission­er of Sri Lanka in New Delhi Milinda Moragoda met with the Secretary of the Department of Fertiliser­s Rajesh Kumar Chaturvedi in New Delhi on Thursday to discuss the supply of urea required for the current Yala cultivatio­n season in Sri Lanka, according to media reports here on Saturday.

Moragoda thanked Chaturvedi for India’s decision to supply 65,000 MT of urea required for the current Yala cultivatio­n season in Sri Lanka, the High Commission of Sri Lanka in New Delhi said in a message.

The Government of India has decided to supply this quantity of urea immediatel­y to Sri Lanka at the request of the Government of Sri Lanka, despite a ban on export of urea from India, the Sri Lankan High Commission said in a statement.

High Commission­er Moragoda thanked Secretary Chaturvedi for his personal involvemen­t in arranging necessary approvals and logistics to supply 65,000 metric tonnes of urea to Sri Lanka in consultati­on with the High Commission­er of India in Colombo Gopal Baglay.

In response, Chaturvedi said that his Department is always ready to support Sri Lanka in keeping with India’s ‘neighbourh­ood first’ policy, and that the Department is making arrangemen­ts to ship the required quantity of urea from the nearest port to Sri Lanka through a State Company coming under his purview.

The High Commission­er and the Secretary also discussed ways and means to ensure the continuous supply of chemical fertiliser from India to Sri Lanka under the existing credit line and beyond.

India has committed more than $3 billion to debt-ridden Sri Lanka in loans, credit lines and credit swaps since January this year.

Yala is the season of paddy cultivatio­n in Sri Lanka that lasts between May and August.

Sri Lanka is aiming to boost its agricultur­e sector to avoid any disruption in the agricultur­e market following the drop in the paddy cultivatio­n in the Maha session.

The Sri Lankan government banned chemical fertiliser­s last year as part of a phased transition towards organic agricultur­e.

The dearth of adequate supplies of organic fertiliser­s affected agricultur­al output, especially rice and tea, and the government recently ended the ban on several key crops.

Sri Lanka’s annual fertiliser imports cost $400 million. Farmers across Sri Lanka have intensifie­d their protests due to the lack of fertiliser and being compelled to abandon their farmlands.

The chemical fertiliser ban, combined with bad weather, led to falling crop yields and contribute­d to inflation hitting a 47-month high of 8.3 per cent in October with food inflation at 11.7 per cent, Daily Mirror, an online news portal said.

Sri Lanka has more than 2 million farmers and up to 70 per cent of its 22 million people are directly or indirectly dependent on agricultur­e.

Sri Lanka’s economic crisis is caused in part by a lack of foreign currency, which has meant that the country cannot afford to pay for imports of staple foods and fuel, leading to acute shortages and very high prices.

The crisis has provoked widespread protests calling for political reform and the resignatio­n of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

‘The Government of India has decided to supply this quantity of urea immediatel­y to Sri Lanka at the request of the Government of Sri Lanka, despite a ban on export of urea from India’

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