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General Studies 3 >> Agriculture

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UREA RULES IN INDIA

UREA RULES IN INDIA

1. Context 
 
In May 2015, the Centre made it mandatory to coat all indigenously manufactured and imported urea with neem oil.
This was followed by replacing 50 kg bags with 45 kg ones in March 2018 and the launch of the liquid "Nano Urea" by the Indian Farmers' Fertiliser Cooperative (IFFCO) in June 2021.
None of the above measures checking illegal diversion for non-agriculture use, smaller bags and increasing nitrogen use efficiency have succeeded in reducing urea consumption.

2. Key Points
 
  • Sales of urea crossed a record 35.7 million tonnes (mt) in the fiscal year ended March 31, 2023.
  • Consumption did dip in the initial two years after neem-coating was fully enforced from December 2015, seemingly making it difficult for the heavily subsidised fertiliser to be used by plywood, particle board, textile dye, cattle feed and synthetic milk makers.
  • But that trend reversed from 2018-19. Urea sales in 2022-23 were about 5.1 mt higher than in 2015-16 and over 9 mt than in 2009-10, before the introduction of the so-called nutrient-based subsidy (NBS) regime in April 2010.
  • All other fertilisers, barring single super phosphate (SSP), have registered much lower increases or even declines.
Image Source: The Indian Express
 
  • Fertilisers are essentially food for crops. They like humans, need nutrients- Primary (N, P, K), Secondary (S, Calcium, magnesium) and micro (iron, zinc, copper, manganese, boron, molybdenum) for plant growth and grain yield. Chart and table show trends in their use and crop yields after usage.
 
3. The failure of NBS
 
  • Under NBS, the government fixed a per-kg subsidy for each fertiliser nutrient: Nitrogen (N), Phosphorus (P), Potash (K) and Sulphur (S).
  • This was as against the earlier product-specific subsidy regime.
  • Linking subsidy to nutrient content was intended to promote balanced fertilisation by discouraging farmers from applying too much urea, di-ammonium phosphate (DAP) and muriate of potash (MOP).
  • These are fertilisers with high content of a single nutrient: Urea (46 per cent N), DAP (46 Per cent P plus 18 per cent N) and MOP (60 per cent K).
  • NBS was expected to induce product innovation, besides more use of complex fertilisers (having lower concentrations of N, P, K and S in different proportions) and SSP (containing only 16 per cent P but also 11 per Cent S).
  • However, the data reveals a worsening nutrient imbalance, with urea consumption rising by over a third since 2009-10.
  • This has been largely courtesy of its maximum retail price (MRP) going up by a mere 16.5 per cent from Rs 4, 830 to Rs 5, 628 per tonne post the introduction of NBS.
  • In the last year, the Narendra Modi Government has also brought back price controls on DAP with companies not allowed to charge more than Rs 27, 000 per tonne.
  • It has led to the sales of both fertilisers soaring in 2022-23 at the expense of NPKS complexes and SSP.

4. The cost of imbalanced fertilisation
  • Fertilisers are essentially food for crops. They, like humans, need nutrients primary (N, P, K), Secondary (S, Calcium, magnesium) and micro (iron, zinc, copper, manganese, boron, molybdenum) for plant growth and grain yield.
  • During the Green Revolution, scientists bred semi-dwarf crop varieties that did not bend or fall over ("lodge") when their earheads were heavy with well-filled grains.
  • These could "tolerate" fertiliser application and produce more grain with higher doses.
  • Over time, though, crop yield response to fertiliser use has more than halved: 1 kg of NPK nutrients yielded 12.1 kg of cereal grains in India during the 1960s, but only 5 kg during the 2010s.
  • The underlying reason has been the disproportionate application of N by farmers.
  • It has established a decline in nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) itself.
  • NUE refers to the proportion of N applied mainly through urea that is utilised by crops to produce harvested yields.
  • Singh, in 2022 the paper has estimated the NUE in India to have fallen from 48.2 per cent in 1962-63 to 34. 7 per cent in 2018.
  • The 34.7 per cent of NUE was below the global average of 45. 3 and 53. 3 per cent for North America in 2018.
  • Simply put, when Indian farmers are applying 100 kg of N, hardly 35 kg is now being utilised, with the balance of 65 kg unavailable to the plant.
  • Some of the unutilised N may convert into organic form and become part of the soil nitrogen pool.
  • This soil's organic nitrogen may then undergo mineralisation (reconvert into inorganic ammonium form) and become available to the subsequent crops.
  • The remaining unutilised  N, however, escapes from the soil-plant system through hydrolysis (breakdown of urea into ammonia gas and its release into the atmosphere) and nitrification (below-the-ground leaching after conversion into nitrate).
5. The Way forward
 
  • If applying more urea is counterproductively manifested in diminishing crop yield response to fertilisers and a rising share of applied N getting lost through ammonia volatilization or leaching into the groundwater as nitrate the obvious solution is to reduce its consumption and promote products containing other nutrients in desired (crop and soil specific) combinations.
  • There are two approaches to cutting urea consumption.
  • The first is raising prices. The current per-tonne MRP is Rs 5, 628 for urea, Rs 27, 000 for DAP and Rs 34, 000 for  MOP are nowhere compatible with a 4:2:1 NPK use ratio generally considered ideal for Indian soils.
  • But since increasing urea prices is not politically easy, a second approach is to improve NUE enabling farmers to harvest the same or more grain yields with fewer bags.
  • The government should make the incorporation of urease and nitrification inhibitors compulsory in urea.
  • These are chemical compounds that inhibit the activity of urease (a soil enzyme that breaks down urea into ammonium and further to ammonia) and nitrifying bacteria (that convert ammonium to nitrate), making more N available to the crops.
  • The government can bear a part of the cost of these chemicals, which are proprietary formulations of global plant nutrient solutions companies such as Koch and BASF.
  • Nano Urea is also primarily aimed at boosting NUE.
  • The ultra-small size of its particles (20-50 nanometers, as against 1-4 millimetres for normal prilled/ granular urea; 1 min= 1 million nm) is said to allow easier penetration through the stomatal pores of leaves.
  • IFFCO  Claims that a single 500 ml Nano Urea bottle containing just 4 per cent N can effectively replace " at least" one 45 kg bag of regular 46 per cent N urea.
  • Nano Urea's limitation is that a liquid fertiliser can only be sprayed after the crop has developed leaves.
  • It cannot replace normal urea for basal application at sowing time or even for the early crop growth stages.
  • Farmers are used to broadcasting fertilisers (uniformly spreading over the field).
  • If the government wants to promote Nano Urea (for foliar application directly to the leaves), it may have to subsidise the cost of spraying.
For Prelims: Nano Urea,  Indian Farmers' Fertiliser Cooperative, nutrient-based subsidy, single super phosphate, 
For Mains:
1. Sales of nitrogenous fertiliser have scaled new highs despite measures to check its use. What is the reason for this, what consequences can it have for crop yield, and what are some possible solutions? (250 Words)
 
Previous Year Questions
 
1. Why does the Government of India promote the use of 'Neem-coated Urea' in agriculture? (UPSC 2016)
A. Release of Neem oil in the soil increases nitrogen fixation by the soil microorganisms
B. Neem coating slows down the rate of dissolution of urea in the soil
C. Nitrous oxide, which is a greenhouse gas is not at all released into the atmosphere by crop fields
D. It is a combination of a weedicide and a fertilizer for particular crops
 
Answer: B
 
2. Urea is   (UPPSC 2017)
1. A nitrogen-containing organic compound
2. A nitrogen-containing in-organic compound
3. A plant hormone
4. An Endergonic compound
 
Answer: 1
 
3. Urea is transported by:  (MPSC 2014)
A. Plasma + Blood
B. Blood + O2
C. RBC + CO2
D. WBC + Saliva
 
Answer: A
 
4. Which one of the following statements about fertilizers is not correct? (NDA 2022)
A. Urea is a phosphorus-containing fertilizer.
B. Application of fertilizer to the soil increases the fertility of the soil.
C. Urea can be prepared by the action of ammonia and carbon dioxide under high pressure and at high temperatures.
D. Urea contains more nitrogen than other fertilizers.
Answer: A
 
5. With reference to chemical fertilizers in India, consider the following statements:  (UPSC 2020) 
1. At present, the retail price of chemical fertilizers is market-driven and not administered by the Government.
2. Ammonia, which is an input of urea, is produced form natural gas.
3. Sulphur, which is a raw material for phosphoric acid fertilizer, is a by-product of oil refineries.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
A. 1 only     B.  2 and 3 only   C.  2 only     D.  1, 2 and 3
 
Answer: B
 
6. Urea, a commonly used nitrogen-based fertiliser, is prepared by the reaction between ammonia and ______. (SSC CGL  2022)
1. carbon dioxide
2. hydrogen
3. oxygen
4. sulphur
 
Answer: 1
Source: The Indian Express
 

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