
New Delhi, March 10 The government said on Tuesday that fertilizer plants have been placed under 'Priority Sector-2' for natural gas supply, thus guaranteeing them at least 70 per cent of their average natural gas consumption to ensure domestic production of key soil nutrients remains insulated from global supply disruptions triggered by the ongoing conflict in West Asia.
The average will be calculated on the basis of the previous six months' consumption, the Ministry of Fertilizers said, notifying the decision in the Natural Gas (Supply Regulation) Order, 2026 on March 9.
"This measure aims to safeguard fertilizer production against global supply chain disruptions, particularly the LNG supply issues caused by the ongoing conflict in the Middle East," the ministry said in a statement.
The move comes amid concerns that political instability in West Asia could disrupt liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipments and affect fertilizer output ahead of the critical Kharif sowing season.
Senior officials from all fertilizer companies participated in a high-level meeting at the Department of Fertilizers on Tuesday, where they presented their preparedness status and flagged challenges. Officials from the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas also attended.
The Department of Fertilizers said India's total fertilizer reserve has reached 180.12 lakh tonne ahead of Kharif — a 36.6 per cent increase over 131.79 lakh tonne recorded on the same date last year. The surge has been driven largely by unprecedented accumulation of DAP (25.17 lakh tonne) and NPK/NPKS (56.30 lakh tonne).
As of March 10, stocks stand at: Urea — 61.51 lakh tonne; DAP — 25.17 lakh tonne; NPK — 56.30 lakh tonne; Potash — 12.90 lakh tonne; SSP — 24.24 lakh tonne.
On the import front, the government has brought in 98 lakh tonne of urea as of February 2026, with an additional 17 lakh tonne in the pipeline over the next three months.
The department said an aggressive advance-stocking strategy during low-consumption periods has resulted in the large buffer, adding that despite disruptions in maritime transport, domestic supply to farmers will remain unaffected.





