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Fertilisers and Agriculture | Urea cloud on Kharif

As fertiliser supply chains tighten and costs surge, risks build for India's farms, threatening output, margins and prices

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PRESSURE POINT: A fertiliser warehouse in Bhopal. Stocks are adequate for now, but import delays could spell trouble by May. (Photo: Mujeeb Faruqui)

In mid-March, unseasonal weather linked to disturbances over the Caspian Sea brought spells of rain across North India, arriving at the worst possible time for farmers. Rabi crops were ready for harvest, and even brief showers raised the risk of damage to wheat and mustard still standing in the fields. At the same time, a more distant but potentially deeper threat was beginning to take shape: war in the Middle East. A prolonged conflict, coupled with disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, could translate into higher input costs, tighter fertiliser availability for the Kharif season and renewed pressure on food inflation.

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