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India expects its annual fertiliser subsidy to increase by 20%

Aparna Sharma, a fertiliser ministry official, said that India's fertiliser subsidy costs are expected to increase by 20% in the current financial period due to a price hike fueled by the Middle East crisis. India, the largest importer in the world of urea has ordered a record amount of 2.5 million metric tonnes of the fertiliser at a price nearly twice what it paid two months earlier.

New Delhi's future import costs could be increased by the record purchases. The purchase represents a quarter (about) of India's total annual imports.

The rising import costs will likely increase India's fertiliser subsidy to companies that sell crop nutrients below market price to farmers.

India's fertilizer subsidy is estimated at?about 1.87 trillion rupees (19.85 billion dollars) for the fiscal year ending in March last year.

India imports fertilisers like urea, muriate of potash and diammonium-phosphate. It also imports liquefied gas, which is a major feedstock for urea production.

Around half of India's DAP imports and urea imports come from the Middle East, with Saudi Arabia as the largest DAP supplier and Oman as the biggest urea provider.

India has higher stocks of fertilisers, but demand is usually highest in June and July when farmers start planting crops like rice, corn and cotton.

(source: Reuters)