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National Academy of Agricultural Sciences organises brainstorming session to develop roadmap for achieving Atmanirbharta in fertilisers
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Thursday, 16 April, 2026, 08 : 00 AM [IST]
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Our Bureau, New Delhi
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The National Academy of Agricultural Sciences (NAAS) organised a brainstorming session to develop a roadmap for achieving Atmanirbharta in fertilisers. Representatives from concerned Government departments, Academia, Fertiliser Industry and Farmers participated in the discussions, and opined unequivocally the necessity of Atmanirbharta in this critical sector.
After the session, secretary, Department of Agriculture Research and Education under Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare and DG, Indian Council of Agriculture Research and president, NAAS Dr M L Jat addressed a press conference. In his address, he said that India has set a target of achieving Atmanirbhar Bharat by 2047, and the agricultural sector will play a pivotal role in this journey. While fertilisers were instrumental during the Green Revolution in boosting production, the current challenge lies in declining fertiliser use efficiency and their indiscriminate application.
Dr Jat further added that with the country consuming nearly 33 million tonnes of fertilisers annually, a significant share of which is imported, reducing import dependency has become imperative. He said addressing this issue requires a comprehensive approach spanning short-term, medium-term, and long-term strategies. He said that the strengthening initiatives like the Soil Health, promoting balanced and need-based fertiliser application, and enhancing awareness among farmers are important steps in this direction.
Dr Jat informed that we must leverage modern technologies such as precision nutrient management, artificial intelligence, and sensor-based systems to optimise fertiliser use. Crop diversification towards pulses and oilseeds, recycling organic waste under the Waste-to-Wealth initiative, and increasing the use of biological sources will further contribute to reducing dependence on chemical fertilisers, he added.
Speaking about the brainstorming session, he informed that it was advised by the participants to adopt a multi-pronged strategy with short, medium and long-term R&D goals, and enabling policies to achieve the same. The roadmap should emphasise strengthening fertiliser research for development of smart alternate fertilisers, utilisation of unexploited indigenous minerals (glauconite, phosphate rocks, mica, polyhalite) and industrial by-products, increased use of biologicals, exploiting the potential of soil microbiome, improved composting techniques, crop breeding for enhanced NUE, good agricultural practices (GAP) involving precision nutrient management integrating fertilisers and organics, soil health restoration, crop diversification and residue recycling.
It was also emphasised that there is need to launch a Mission Mode Program to promote Integrated Nutrient Supply and Management (INSAM). The goal of proposed mission would be to replace at least 25% of current mineral fertiliser use with organic manures in the next 3 years. An aggressive round-the-year technology transfer using digital tools such as AI platform Bharat VISTAAR would help largescale adoption of the proven technologies. Weak extension lays greater emphasis on increasing fertiliser use and not on its efficient use.
The representatives reached a consensus that a paradigm shift is needed in the current fertiliser policies, especially bringing urea in the ambit of nutrient-based subsidy, repurposing fertiliser subsidy as an incentive for adoption of GAP, linking subsidies with soil health card, and exploring the possibility to disbursing subsidy to the farmers as direct cash transfer. Availability of cheap urea is a principal disincentive to make its efficient use or to stop making its over-use. Proportionally underuse than recommended of more expensive fertiliser P and K provokes their deficiencies in soil and crops.
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