The Borneo Post (Sabah)

India halts potash imports as droughts hit crop plantings

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MUMBAI: India has halted its potash imports for the year to end-March and delayed negotiatio­ns for next year’s purchases until at least June, as droughts have dented demand in one of the world’s biggest fertilizer consumers, government officials said.

The decision, which has not been previously reported, is India’s first pause in potash imports in years and will be tough on suppliers already reeling from weak demand as China and Brazil also trim their buying. Major suppliers to India include Uralkali, Potash Corp of Saskatchew­an, Agrium Inc, Mosaic, K+S, Arab PotashCo and Israel Chemicals.

Spot prices of potash, a crop nutrient, are at eight-year lows of around US$230 a tonne, down by more than a quarter from a year ago.

“Demand is weak due to the drought,” said PS Gahlaut, managing director of state-run Indian Potash Ltd, the country’s biggest importer. Gahlaut said India had one million tonnes of potash inventory despite cutting back on imports.

India’s move to halt its potash imports underscore­s the country’s changing position in global commoditie­s markets because of a deepening crisis in its farm sector.

Successive droughts have slowed plantings of crops including rice, wheat, sugarcane, corn, cotton, soybean and rapeseed, and cut the need for fertilizer. But this is also turning India into a net buyer for commoditie­s for the first time in years.

The agricultur­e sector, which employs some two-thirds of India’s 1.25 billion population, poses a risk to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s economic growth ambitions. Falling imports

The suspension of imports means India will buy less potash this year than it had planned.

Last May, Indian fertilizer producers including Rashtriya Chemicals and Fertilizer­s Ltd (RCF), IFFCO and Chambal Fertiliser­s and Chemicals agreed to import a total of 4.5 million tonnes of potash, with an option to increase that to 5.2 million tonnes.

So far this fiscal year, they have shipped in only three million tonnes, and will not be buying any more, industry officials said. An official at staterun RCF said the government has also taken the rare step of restrictin­g movement of imported fertilizer­s in an effort to cut down on imports.

India usually opens negotiatio­ns for potash imports in February, with new contracts signed before the start of the fiscal year in April. Gahlaut, who is part of that negotiatin­g process for India, said talks would now start only in June.

Contracts signed by India and China typically become benchmarks for other potash buyers in Asia, such as Malaysia and Indonesia. Rains hold key

Government and industry officials say India’s potash imports are unlikely next year to regain levels of over four million tonnes seen in the past few years.

Gahlaut sees imports of around 3.5 million tonnes in the year starting in April, and even that would depend on monsoon rains in June-September which deliver about 70 per cent of the country’s annual rainfall and sustain nearly half of India’s farmlands that lack irrigation.

“If the monsoons deliver good rainfall then we will need to import around 3.5 million tonnes,” Gahlaut said. “If (the rains) fail like this year the requiremen­ts would be much smaller.” — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A shopkeeper speaks on his mobile phone next to a sack filled with potash for sale in Kolkata, India.
— Reuters photo A shopkeeper speaks on his mobile phone next to a sack filled with potash for sale in Kolkata, India.

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