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West Asia Crisis Hits Fertilisers and Pharma Sectors: JP Nadda

Union Minister JP Nadda has acknowledged the impact of the West Asia crisis on the fertiliser and pharmaceutical sectors. He assured that the government has taken proactive measures to diversify supply sources and prevent shortages. Nadda highlighted that India is sourcing fertilisers from countries outside the Strait of Hormuz route. He also addressed concerns about climate-related disasters in Himalayan regions, confirming expert studies are underway.

"West Asia Crisis has impacted fertilisers and Pharma sectors", says Union Minister JP Nadda

Shimla, June 14

The Union Minister for Health and Family Welfare and Chemicals & Fertilisers, Jagat Prakash Nadda, said that the ongoing West Asia crisis has affected global supply chains linked to the fertiliser and pharmaceutical sectors, but assured that the Government of India has taken adequate measures to ensure that farmers and consumers do not face any hardship.

Addressing mediapersons in Shimla, Nadda on Saturday said India had proactively diversified its sourcing strategy and strengthened supply arrangements to shield the country from disruptions arising out of geopolitical tensions in West Asia.

Responding to a question from ANI regarding the impact of the crisis on the pharmaceutical and fertiliser industries, Nadda said the government had adopted a multi-pronged approach to safeguard supplies of medicines, medical devices and fertilisers.

"Despite the West Asia crisis, we have ensured that there will be no shortage of medicines, medical devices or fertilisers in India. Our farmers and citizens will not face any difficulty, and we have already diversified our supply sources to safeguard national interests." Said JP Nadda.

"The situation in West Asia is a matter of concern, but we have strategically prepared ourselves. Despite the crisis, we are fully capable of ensuring that the people of India do not suffer any adverse impact. We have made all necessary preparations and have closely monitored pharmaceuticals, medicines, medical devices and other critical supplies," he said.

Nadda said the government has also taken steps to secure fertiliser imports from countries outside the Strait of Hormuz region.

"We have moved towards alternative sources of fertilisers and are issuing fresh tenders with countries such as Indonesia, Australia, Russia and China, which are outside the Strait of Hormuz route. We have sufficient fertiliser stocks for the ongoing Kharif season and are already preparing for the Rabi season," he said.

The Union Minister asserted that the Centre's focus was not on predicting the duration of the crisis but on ensuring uninterrupted supplies for citizens.

"We are not asking whether the crisis will last 15 days or one month. Our priority is that our people should not face any difficulty. Farmers in the country will not be affected," he added.

On being asked about the increasing frequency of climate-related disasters in Himachal Pradesh and other Himalayan regions, and concerns over extensive construction activities and highway cutting, Nadda acknowledged the concern and said the Centre had already initiated studies on the issue.

"Your concern is very valid. I cannot authenticate all the reasons at this stage, but after the recent disasters, the Government of India assigned experts to undertake studies. Such analyses are being carried out not only for Himachal Pradesh but also for Uttarakhand," he said.

Nadda said he was not immediately aware of the latest status of the reports, but confirmed that scientific assessments were underway to understand the causes behind the increasing incidents of natural disasters in the Himalayan region.

The remarks came amid growing concerns over global supply disruptions due to tensions in West Asia and recurring extreme weather events that have triggered landslides, flash floods and infrastructure damage across Himalayan states in recent years.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Vikram M

The strategic shift away from Hormuz-dependent routes is commendable. As a pharma professional, I'm relieved to hear about securing medicine supplies. But I wish the minister had shared numbers—how much buffer stock of critical drugs like APIs do we actually hold? Transparency builds more trust.

Michael C

Interesting to see India pivot to Russia and China for fertilisers during West Asia crisis. As an observer, I wonder if this opens long-term dependencies on other volatile regions. But for now, farmers should be priority over geopolitics. Let's see if DAP prices stay stable.

Priya S

Good to see government acknowledging climate disasters in Himachal too. The Himalayan states have been screaming about unchecked construction for years. Nadda ji saying 'scientific studies are underway' is positive, but we need action—not just reports. Landslides are taking lives every monsoon now. 😢

Rohit P

As a farmer from Punjab, I'm hearing similar assurances every year. Abhi toh Kharif season chal raha hai, but last year urea shortage hui thi in some blocks. Sourcing from multiple countries is good, but ground-level distribution is where the real test is. Ye dekhna hoga ki last mile delivery kaise hoti hai.

Kavya N

The pharma angle is crucial—India is the 'pharmacy of the world' but we import 70% of our APIs from China. If West Asia crisis + China tensions combine, it could be a perfect storm. Diversification is necessary but domestic production of bulk drugs needs real push, not just tenders. 🙏

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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