India Assures Ample Fertiliser Stocks for Kharif Season

India's fertiliser stocks are substantially higher than requirements, with over 50% of the total kharif season needs already available. The Department of Fertilisers reported strong opening positions for all major fertilisers including urea, DAP, MOP, NPK and SSP. The government has added approximately 84 LMT of fertilisers after the West Asia crisis and secured additional supplies through global tenders. Domestic urea production in April 2026 reached 20.98 LMT, nearly matching last year's levels.

Key Points: India's Fertiliser Stocks High for Kharif Season

  • Stocks exceed 50% of kharif requirement
  • Urea availability at 62.28 LMT vs 2.66 LMT demand
  • 84 LMT added after West Asia crisis
  • Global tenders issued for DAP, TSP, ammonium sulphate
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India has ample fertiliser stocks to meet farmers' needs: Govt

India's fertiliser stocks exceed 50% of kharif requirements, ensuring farmers' needs are met amid global supply challenges.

"India's fertiliser security remains strong, stable, and well-managed - Department of Fertilisers"

New Delhi, May 4

India's fertiliser stocks remain substantially higher than the requirement in states reflecting the strong opening position for the ongoing kharif season, the Department of Fertilisers said on Monday.

The availability of urea is at 62.28 lakh metric tonnes (LMT) on May 3, as against a requirement of 2.66 LMT, while DAP's availability is 20.32 LMT against 0.85 LMT requirement, MOP availability is 7.60 LMT against 0.22 LMT requirement, NPK availability is 49.71 LMT against 1.16 LMT requirement, and SSP availability is 24.60 LMT against 0.55 LMT requirement, the department said in a statement.

For kharif 2026, the fertiliser requirement has been assessed by the Ministry of Agriculture at 390.54 lakh metric tonnes (LMT), and against this, the stock as on Monday is around 195.71 LMT, which is more than 50 per cent of the total requirement for the entire season. This is significantly higher than the usual level of about 33 per cent of earlier years. India's fertiliser security remains strong, stable, and well-managed, with availability consistently exceeding requirements across all major fertilisers, according to the statement.

This reflects improved planning, advance stocking, and efficient logistics management by the government, the statement said.

A total of approximately 84 LMT of fertilisers has been added to the availability after the crisis situation developed in West Asia. In April this year, urea production achieved the domestic production of 20.98 LMT as compared to 21.89 LMT in April last year, the statement said.

India has secured a total of 38.07 LMT of urea through global tender since February-end to date. The country has also secured around 6 LMT of NPK, which is scheduled to arrive at Indian ports in May and June.

Indian fertiliser companies have issued an aggregated global tender for the procurement of 12 LMT DAP, 4 LMT TSP, and 3 LMT ammonium sulphate last week. These will help to ensure adequate availability during the peak season.

Availability of inputs for production of fertilisers, including urea and P&K fertilisers, is being regularly reviewed by the Department of Fertilisers, the statement added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Finally some transparent numbers from the govt! As someone from a farming family in UP, I can tell you the real challenge is not just stock but distribution. Many times fertilisers don't reach small farmers on time. Hope the logistics are as smooth as the numbers suggest. Let's see how this kharif season goes.
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Michael C
Impressive stockpile, but I'm curious about the quality consistency. I work in agri-trade and we've seen cases where imported fertilisers don't match local soil needs. India needs to balance global procurement with region-specific formulations. Still, kudos for the proactive steps given West Asia instability.
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Rohit P
Numbers look great on paper, but ground reality in Maharashtra is different. Last month, farmers in my taluka struggled to get DAP despite claims of surplus. The procurement is fine, but distribution needs stronger monitoring at block level. Also, why does the article mention 2026 for kharif? It's 2025 right now—typo? Anyway, hope this season is better than last year. Jai Kisan! 🌱
J
Jennifer L
It's interesting to see India's fertiliser strategy compared to other emerging economies. The global tender approach seems effective, especially securing supplies amidst West Asia tensions. However, I wonder about the cost implications for farmers—are subsidies keeping prices stable? That would be the real test of 'farmers' needs'.
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Neha E
Such assurance is welcome, but let's not ignore the environmental angle. Over-reliance on chemical fertilisers is degrading our soil health. The gov

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