India Faces Agricultural Challenges Amid Fertilizer Crisis and Soil Degradation
India Faces Agricultural Challenges Amid Fertilizer Crisis and Soil Degradation
IN · Published Jun 7, 2026
India's agricultural sector is grappling with a dual crisis of rising fertilizer costs and deteriorating soil health.
The country, heavily reliant on imports for key fertilizers like urea, DAP (Di-Ammonium Phosphate), and MoP (Muriate of Potash), faces supply chain disruptions due to geopolitical tensions, particularly in the Persian Gulf.

Why It's Important?

The crisis poses severe risks to India's food security and economic stability. Farmers, who make up two-thirds of the population, are particularly vulnerable as soil degradation reduces crop yields and increases dependency on costly chemical fertilizers. Rising food prices, driven by lower yields and higher input costs, could lead to widespread inflation and malnutrition. Additionally, the fiscal burden of fertilizer subsidies, which reached ₹1.86 lakh crore in FY 2026, strains government resources. Environmental impacts include biodiversity loss, water table depletion, and increased soil toxicity, which could have long-term consequences for agricultural sustainability.

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