SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 33
Download to read offline
FERTILIZER IN AGRICULTURE
OF INDIA
TECHNOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
FOR
SUSTAINABLE AGRO-INDUSTRY
INPUTS FOR HIGHER AGROPRODUCTIVITY
• Quality seeds
• Irrigation and drainage
• Fertilizer

• Protect against insects, pests, diseases:
agrochemicals
Sixteen elements are required by the crops:

• Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, [from water and
air],
• Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium, [macro],
• Calcium, Magnesium, Sulphur,
Chlorine,[micro],
• Iron, Manganese, Silicon, Boron, Zinc,
Copper, Nickel, Molybdenum and Selenium
[Traces]
The amount and relative proportion
of these
nutrients will depend on a number
of factors.
The most important factors are:
(i) nutrient status of soil and
(ii) nutrient requirement of the
crop.
TYPES OF FERTILIZERS
•

Organic fertilizer or manure

•

Chemical fertilizer

•

Bio-fertilizer

•

Composted manure

•

Vermi - composted manure
Organic Manure
• Organic manure not only provides plant
nutrients but also improves soil
physical, chemical and biological
properties.
• In addition to fertilizers, the use or
organic manure is essential for
sustaining crop productivity.
• Preparation of good quality manure
Fill the mixture of dung, urine and other
materials layer by layer ; moistening it each
time.
Add suitable inoculum to hasten the rate of
decomposition of manure.
Enrich the mixture with 100 kg of rock
phosphate/bone meal/ superphosphate to
improve the nutrient content of manure.
Seal the pit with mud plaster after it is filled.
The manure ready for use after 4-6 months.
Primary Nutrients
• Nitrogen: Ammonia or nitrate salts
• Phosphorus: Water soluble phosphates
of calcium, Di-ammonium phosphate
• Potassium: Potassium chloride
Integrated Plant Nutrient Management
(IPNM)
It aims at maintaining soil fertility and plant nutrient supply

for sustainable crop productivity by adjusting

• chemical fertilizer,

• organic manure,
• biofertilizer and
• crop residues.
Different proportions of these components are to be used
based upon crop requirements and availability of materials
IPNM will be the means through which the longterm fertility of the soil will be assured and

contamination of the environment minimized.
Yet, IPNM alone will not be sufficient to bring this

about; farmers need to adopt effective and
efficient crop, pest, soil, and water management

techniques as well. Governments have an
important role to play to promote effective and

environmentally sound management of plant
nutrients.
Institutions have to promote effective and
environmentally sound management of

o plant nutrients,
o improve research,
o monitoring,

o participation, and
o extension

of effective plant nutrient management.
Governments have to support complementary

measures to lower costs, recycle urban waste,
secure land tenure. Also it is necessary to

increase production capacity, to improve
transport and communication infrastructure, and

to establish an effective institutional environment
conducive to the efficient functioning of nutrient,

other input and output markets.
The cropping system rather than the individual crop
and the farming system rather than the individual field
are the focus of this approach for developing IPNM
systems for major agro-ecological zones and for
various categories of farms.
Control of pests and diseases in agriculture is very
important. Earlier approaches of insecticides

applications to contain pests is no longer desirable
because of their increasing costs and the adverse
effects on the environment. Therefore, the concept of
IPM all over the world has assumed great importance.
General nutrient recommendation for some
important crops
Bio fertilizers (BF) (microbial inoculants) are the
products containing living cells of different types
of micro organisms (bacteria, fungi,
actinomycetes, etc.) which have the ability to fix
atmospheric nitrogen and mobilize phosphorus
in the soil from unavailable form to plant usable
form. Use of Rhizobium culture in legumes is
most promising among different kinds of
biofertilizers
Vermi-Compost
Vermi-composting uses earthworms to
produce compost from organic residues.

Earthworms can practically eat all kinds of
organic matter. The guidelines for

preparing a good quality vermi - compost
should be adopted.
CHEMICAL FERTILIZERS
EXPENSIVE, TO PRODUCE THOUGH
NEEDED INPUT FOR HIGH YIELDING
FOOD CROPS, EXCESS CAN CAUSE
ENVIRONMENTAL ADVERSE IMPACT
Total P content in soil is usually high, but most of
this soil P pool is not in forms available for plant
uptake (insoluble in water). Bacteria that can
mobilize P from unavailable soil pools and increase

P availability to plants are of great importance. Most
predominant phosphorus-solubilizing bacteria (PSB)

belong to the genera Bacillus and Pseudomonas.
Field experiments highlight the potential importance

of PSB.
phosphorus-solubilizing bacteria (PSB)
o Sundara et al. (2002) applied rock phosphate

with a PSB (Bacillus megaterium var.
phosphaticum) in lignite-based culture medium
in a field experiment.
o They found that PSB amendment could
increase sugarcane yield by 12.6 percent.
o PSB and P fertilizer together reduced the P
requirement by 25 percent.
Furthermore, 50 percent of the costly
superphosphate could be replaced with
inexpensive rock phosphate. PSB also improved
the sugar yield and juice quality (Sundara et al.,
2002). In conclusion, biofertilizer based on PSB
may be of greatest value in allowing use of
cheaper P sources.
Indo Maroc Phosphore S A (IMACID), Chambal's
world-class joint venture phosphoric acid plant in
Morocco, commenced production in November
1999. The US$ 204 million joint venture project, in
equal participation with Office Cherifien Des
Phosphates (OCP) of Morocco, produces 3,30,000
tonnes per annum of merchant grade phosphoric
acid (54% of P2O5). OCP is the largest producer of
phosphoric acid in the world.
Phosphoric acid is a raw material for production
of DAP and other complex fertilizer grades. Zuari

Industries Limited buys its entire phosphoric acid
requirements from IMACID. This arrangement

ensures an uninterrupted supply of phosphoric
acid to the Company to produce DAP and also

helps bridge the gap between demand and
supply of phosphoric acid, since India imports
over 80% of its phosphoric acid requirement.
Fertilizers are basic nutrients supplied to soil,
which replenish the depletion or original deficiency

of nutrients in the soil. India is third largest
producer and consumer of chemical fertilizers in
the world, and accounts for 12% of the world
consumption. The consumption of chemical
fertilizers in 1999 was 75.26 kg/hectare. The net
sown area in India for food grains production is
about 141 million hectares.
Raw materials like phosphate rock, sulphur and
potassium salts are imported. Indigenously produced

fertilizer meets only about eighty per cent of the country’s
fertilizer need.

Indian fertilizer industry has played a significant role in
increasing food grains production along with high yielding
varieties of seeds and enhanced irrigation facilities,
during the green revolution of last thirty years.
Growth in fertilizer application took place from 78.4 lakh
tonnes in 1965-66 to about 140 lakh tonnes in 1995-96.
The estimated food grain consumption in 2011-12 is 298
million tonnes. To achieve this target an increase in

consumption of fertilizers to185.8 kg/ hectare is needed
The development of chemical fertilizer industry in India took
place in three phases.
From 1950-65, the awareness of the usefulness of
chemical fertilizers in enhancing the crop yield increased
along with due consideration for the practice of application
of organic manures and green manures. During this period

manufacturing facilities increased gradually.
From the year 1965, increase in farm productivity
was given more importance and growth in fertilizer
production and application was enhanced
significantly.
To provide fertilizers to farmers at reasonable price,
the Government of India from 1977 operated the
retention price cum subsidy scheme. The producers
were provided compensation by the Govt. for
supplying fertilizers at the controlled price.
In the mid-seventies prices of hydrocarbon raw materials
increased, followed by the mid-eighties finding the increase
in yield per mass of fertilizer applied reaching a saturated
stage.
Over the years, the cost of production has increased and
subsidy amount provided to industry greatly increased.
In 1992, decontrol of the prices of phosphatic and potassic
fertilizers were introduced. This was done as a part of a

policy, which was meant to bring the fertilizer industry in
line with the liberalized and. Pro-market economic policies.
The synergy between the application of inorganic
fertilizer and the development of nutrientresponsive seed varieties was responsible for the
phenomenal growth in crop yields and food
supplies in developed countries over the past

thirty-five years. The ability of agriculture to
provide for food needs to the year 2020 and
beyond is increasingly difficult however.
In developed countries, over-application of
inorganic and organic fertilizers has led to

environmental damage, while
in developing countries, population pressures,
land constraints, and the decline of traditional
soil management practices have led to a decline
in the fertility of the soil.
The over-supply of nutrients from inorganic and
organic sources in excess of plant needs and in the

absence of a mechanism to bind the nutrients to
the soil, can lead to environmental contamination.

Soil nitrate concentrations in excess of plant
absorption needs, for example, allow the soluble

nitrate to be carried away in ground water to
contaminate surface waters and underground

aquifers.
Consumption of water high in nitrate (and nitrite)
has been linked to

•

“blue baby syndrome,”

• goitre,

• birth defects and
• heart disease,

and may be involved in the creation of carcinogenic
compds within the body that can cause stomach or

liver cancers.
Leaching and run-off of nitrogen and phosphorus
into rivers, lakes, and inlets, can cause

eutrophication--an excess accumulation of
nutrients in water that promotes algal over-

production. Heavy application of inorganic NPK
fertilizers does not replace secondary and other

micro-nutrients removed by harvested crops,
crop residue and erosion, nor do they directly

improve soil organic matter content and structure.
Lastly, genetic engineering offers the potential in the
future for the plants themselves to meet some of their
nutrient requirements.
Together, these nutrient conservation and replenishment
methods need to be managed - reflecting the farmer's

particular bio-physical and socio-economic situations, in
such a way as to provide a cost effective and
appropriate level of nutrients to maximize yields and
sustain agriculture, without polluting the environment.

More Related Content

What's hot

customized and value added fertilizers.pptx
customized and value added fertilizers.pptxcustomized and value added fertilizers.pptx
customized and value added fertilizers.pptx
PragyaNaithani
 

What's hot (20)

customized and value added fertilizers.pptx
customized and value added fertilizers.pptxcustomized and value added fertilizers.pptx
customized and value added fertilizers.pptx
 
Nutrient use efficiency
Nutrient  use efficiency Nutrient  use efficiency
Nutrient use efficiency
 
Soil Testing – its importance
Soil Testing – its importanceSoil Testing – its importance
Soil Testing – its importance
 
Crop rotation and its principle
Crop rotation and its principleCrop rotation and its principle
Crop rotation and its principle
 
Crop diversification for Sustainable Agriculture
Crop diversification for Sustainable AgricultureCrop diversification for Sustainable Agriculture
Crop diversification for Sustainable Agriculture
 
Acid soil and their management
Acid soil and their managementAcid soil and their management
Acid soil and their management
 
Fertigation system
Fertigation systemFertigation system
Fertigation system
 
Soil fertility evaluation and fertilizer recommendation
Soil fertility evaluation and fertilizer recommendationSoil fertility evaluation and fertilizer recommendation
Soil fertility evaluation and fertilizer recommendation
 
Unit 1 lecture-1 soil fertility and soil productivity
Unit 1 lecture-1 soil fertility and soil productivityUnit 1 lecture-1 soil fertility and soil productivity
Unit 1 lecture-1 soil fertility and soil productivity
 
Agronomy introduction
Agronomy introductionAgronomy introduction
Agronomy introduction
 
cropping system
cropping systemcropping system
cropping system
 
Integarted nutrient management
Integarted nutrient managementIntegarted nutrient management
Integarted nutrient management
 
Integrated Nutrient Management and Balanced Fertilization by Bhanumahi (CCSH...
Integrated Nutrient Management  and Balanced Fertilization by Bhanumahi (CCSH...Integrated Nutrient Management  and Balanced Fertilization by Bhanumahi (CCSH...
Integrated Nutrient Management and Balanced Fertilization by Bhanumahi (CCSH...
 
Farming system
Farming systemFarming system
Farming system
 
Integrated Farming System PDF
Integrated Farming System  PDFIntegrated Farming System  PDF
Integrated Farming System PDF
 
Fertilizer Use Efficiency.pptx
Fertilizer Use Efficiency.pptxFertilizer Use Efficiency.pptx
Fertilizer Use Efficiency.pptx
 
Fertiliser calculation
Fertiliser calculationFertiliser calculation
Fertiliser calculation
 
nutrient use efficiency
nutrient use efficiencynutrient use efficiency
nutrient use efficiency
 
Natural Farming- Zero Budget Natural Farming
Natural Farming- Zero Budget Natural FarmingNatural Farming- Zero Budget Natural Farming
Natural Farming- Zero Budget Natural Farming
 
ORGANIC FARMING: IT’S IMPACT ON SOIL HEALTH AND FOOD GRAIN SECURITY
ORGANIC FARMING: IT’S IMPACT ON SOIL HEALTH AND FOOD GRAIN SECURITY ORGANIC FARMING: IT’S IMPACT ON SOIL HEALTH AND FOOD GRAIN SECURITY
ORGANIC FARMING: IT’S IMPACT ON SOIL HEALTH AND FOOD GRAIN SECURITY
 

Viewers also liked

Fertilizer ppt By Saheed vk
Fertilizer ppt By Saheed vkFertilizer ppt By Saheed vk
Fertilizer ppt By Saheed vk
vannnathankandi
 
Fertilizer Industry
Fertilizer IndustryFertilizer Industry
Fertilizer Industry
bhai1245
 
Organic chemistry in agriculture
Organic chemistry in agricultureOrganic chemistry in agriculture
Organic chemistry in agriculture
Ishaq Iqbal
 
Advantages & disadvantages of fertilizers
Advantages & disadvantages of fertilizersAdvantages & disadvantages of fertilizers
Advantages & disadvantages of fertilizers
Rutvij Khatri
 
Organic Agriculture
Organic AgricultureOrganic Agriculture
Organic Agriculture
hpau_vee
 
inorganic fertilizers
inorganic fertilizersinorganic fertilizers
inorganic fertilizers
Azura Ramle
 
Methods of Fertilizer Application
Methods of Fertilizer ApplicationMethods of Fertilizer Application
Methods of Fertilizer Application
zeeshan Uafshani430
 

Viewers also liked (20)

Fertilizer ppt By Saheed vk
Fertilizer ppt By Saheed vkFertilizer ppt By Saheed vk
Fertilizer ppt By Saheed vk
 
Fertiliser ppt
Fertiliser pptFertiliser ppt
Fertiliser ppt
 
Fertilizer types
Fertilizer typesFertilizer types
Fertilizer types
 
Fertilizers- the Chemistry behind it
Fertilizers- the Chemistry behind itFertilizers- the Chemistry behind it
Fertilizers- the Chemistry behind it
 
fertilizer
fertilizerfertilizer
fertilizer
 
Fertilizer and their use in india
Fertilizer and their use in indiaFertilizer and their use in india
Fertilizer and their use in india
 
Organic fertilizers
Organic fertilizersOrganic fertilizers
Organic fertilizers
 
Fertilizer Industry
Fertilizer IndustryFertilizer Industry
Fertilizer Industry
 
manures & fertilizers
manures & fertilizersmanures & fertilizers
manures & fertilizers
 
Organic chemistry in agriculture
Organic chemistry in agricultureOrganic chemistry in agriculture
Organic chemistry in agriculture
 
Advantages & disadvantages of fertilizers
Advantages & disadvantages of fertilizersAdvantages & disadvantages of fertilizers
Advantages & disadvantages of fertilizers
 
Fertilizers
FertilizersFertilizers
Fertilizers
 
Biofertilizer Production and Application
Biofertilizer Production and ApplicationBiofertilizer Production and Application
Biofertilizer Production and Application
 
Organic Agriculture
Organic AgricultureOrganic Agriculture
Organic Agriculture
 
BIO FERTILIZER
BIO FERTILIZERBIO FERTILIZER
BIO FERTILIZER
 
Biofertilizer
BiofertilizerBiofertilizer
Biofertilizer
 
Biofertilizer
BiofertilizerBiofertilizer
Biofertilizer
 
What are different types of fertilizer
What are different types of fertilizerWhat are different types of fertilizer
What are different types of fertilizer
 
inorganic fertilizers
inorganic fertilizersinorganic fertilizers
inorganic fertilizers
 
Methods of Fertilizer Application
Methods of Fertilizer ApplicationMethods of Fertilizer Application
Methods of Fertilizer Application
 

Similar to Fertilizer in agriculture of india

Integtared nutrient supply & management
Integtared nutrient supply & managementIntegtared nutrient supply & management
Integtared nutrient supply & management
CSK HPKV, Palampur, HP
 
Integrated Nutrient Management For Sustainable Vegetable Production
Integrated Nutrient Management For Sustainable Vegetable ProductionIntegrated Nutrient Management For Sustainable Vegetable Production
Integrated Nutrient Management For Sustainable Vegetable Production
Vasantrao Nail Marathwada Krishi Vidyapeeth, Parbhani
 
Bio slurry ultimate choice of bio fertilisers SNV Netherlands -2014-001
Bio slurry ultimate choice of bio fertilisers   SNV Netherlands -2014-001Bio slurry ultimate choice of bio fertilisers   SNV Netherlands -2014-001
Bio slurry ultimate choice of bio fertilisers SNV Netherlands -2014-001
A B M Aminul Haque
 
paper biofertilizer
paper biofertilizerpaper biofertilizer
paper biofertilizer
Mayank Ameta
 

Similar to Fertilizer in agriculture of india (20)

Integtared nutrient supply & management
Integtared nutrient supply & managementIntegtared nutrient supply & management
Integtared nutrient supply & management
 
Inm by srujana rathod.k
Inm by srujana rathod.kInm by srujana rathod.k
Inm by srujana rathod.k
 
Integrated Nutrient Management For Sustainable Vegetable Production
Integrated Nutrient Management For Sustainable Vegetable ProductionIntegrated Nutrient Management For Sustainable Vegetable Production
Integrated Nutrient Management For Sustainable Vegetable Production
 
Intregrated nutrient management
Intregrated nutrient managementIntregrated nutrient management
Intregrated nutrient management
 
Integrated nutrient management , soil science and agricultural chemistry
Integrated nutrient management , soil science and agricultural chemistryIntegrated nutrient management , soil science and agricultural chemistry
Integrated nutrient management , soil science and agricultural chemistry
 
integrated nutrient management and its importance.pptx
integrated nutrient management and its importance.pptxintegrated nutrient management and its importance.pptx
integrated nutrient management and its importance.pptx
 
Inm in horticulture
Inm in horticultureInm in horticulture
Inm in horticulture
 
Biofertilizers - Importance
Biofertilizers - Importance Biofertilizers - Importance
Biofertilizers - Importance
 
INTEGRATED USE OF BIOINOCULANTS AND FERTILIZERS IN VEGETABLES FOR SUSTAINABLE...
INTEGRATED USE OF BIOINOCULANTS AND FERTILIZERS IN VEGETABLES FOR SUSTAINABLE...INTEGRATED USE OF BIOINOCULANTS AND FERTILIZERS IN VEGETABLES FOR SUSTAINABLE...
INTEGRATED USE OF BIOINOCULANTS AND FERTILIZERS IN VEGETABLES FOR SUSTAINABLE...
 
INM ( INTEGRATED NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT) - IPNS .pptx
INM ( INTEGRATED NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT) - IPNS .pptxINM ( INTEGRATED NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT) - IPNS .pptx
INM ( INTEGRATED NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT) - IPNS .pptx
 
Bio slurry ultimate choice of bio fertilisers SNV Netherlands -2014-001
Bio slurry ultimate choice of bio fertilisers   SNV Netherlands -2014-001Bio slurry ultimate choice of bio fertilisers   SNV Netherlands -2014-001
Bio slurry ultimate choice of bio fertilisers SNV Netherlands -2014-001
 
INM-ppt.ppt
INM-ppt.pptINM-ppt.ppt
INM-ppt.ppt
 
Analysis of organic fertilizer market
Analysis of organic fertilizer marketAnalysis of organic fertilizer market
Analysis of organic fertilizer market
 
paper biofertilizer
paper biofertilizerpaper biofertilizer
paper biofertilizer
 
Biofertilizewr chapter 141 (1)
Biofertilizewr chapter 141 (1)Biofertilizewr chapter 141 (1)
Biofertilizewr chapter 141 (1)
 
90. Nutrient Management Under Organic Farming.pdf
90. Nutrient Management Under Organic Farming.pdf90. Nutrient Management Under Organic Farming.pdf
90. Nutrient Management Under Organic Farming.pdf
 
NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN ORGANIC FARMING
NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN  ORGANIC FARMINGNUTRIENT MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN  ORGANIC FARMING
NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN ORGANIC FARMING
 
Effect of Algal Bio-fertilizer on the Vigna radiata: A Critical Review
Effect of Algal Bio-fertilizer on the Vigna radiata: A Critical ReviewEffect of Algal Bio-fertilizer on the Vigna radiata: A Critical Review
Effect of Algal Bio-fertilizer on the Vigna radiata: A Critical Review
 
Effect of Algal Bio-fertilizer on the Vigna radiata: A Critical Review
Effect of Algal Bio-fertilizer on the Vigna radiata: A Critical ReviewEffect of Algal Bio-fertilizer on the Vigna radiata: A Critical Review
Effect of Algal Bio-fertilizer on the Vigna radiata: A Critical Review
 
Soil health management by Sanjay H B
Soil health management by Sanjay H BSoil health management by Sanjay H B
Soil health management by Sanjay H B
 

More from H Janardan Prabhu

More from H Janardan Prabhu (20)

Vishal Desh Federation
Vishal Desh FederationVishal Desh Federation
Vishal Desh Federation
 
Way of Peace
Way of PeaceWay of Peace
Way of Peace
 
Peace of mind
Peace of mindPeace of mind
Peace of mind
 
Solar PV Energy Principles
Solar PV Energy PrinciplesSolar PV Energy Principles
Solar PV Energy Principles
 
Coal gasify
Coal gasifyCoal gasify
Coal gasify
 
Petro refinery basics
Petro refinery basicsPetro refinery basics
Petro refinery basics
 
Renewable Energy
Renewable EnergyRenewable Energy
Renewable Energy
 
Future is not ours to see
Future is not ours to seeFuture is not ours to see
Future is not ours to see
 
Bihar Jano
Bihar JanoBihar Jano
Bihar Jano
 
Bihaar katha
Bihaar kathaBihaar katha
Bihaar katha
 
Mahaan Bharath Hamara
Mahaan Bharath HamaraMahaan Bharath Hamara
Mahaan Bharath Hamara
 
ABCs of Desalting of water to recover water as well as salt.
ABCs of Desalting of water to recover water as well as salt.ABCs of Desalting of water to recover water as well as salt.
ABCs of Desalting of water to recover water as well as salt.
 
Apna bharath
Apna bharathApna bharath
Apna bharath
 
India now
India nowIndia now
India now
 
History of World literature1
History of  World literature1History of  World literature1
History of World literature1
 
ENG LIT H-A-Beers
ENG LIT H-A-BeersENG LIT H-A-Beers
ENG LIT H-A-Beers
 
Remedy for Ganga Pollution 2017
Remedy for Ganga Pollution 2017Remedy for Ganga Pollution 2017
Remedy for Ganga Pollution 2017
 
Ganga Work - Namami Gange
Ganga Work - Namami GangeGanga Work - Namami Gange
Ganga Work - Namami Gange
 
Ganga Rejuvenate Project - 2016
Ganga Rejuvenate Project - 2016Ganga Rejuvenate Project - 2016
Ganga Rejuvenate Project - 2016
 
Ganga Action Plan - A 2007 Review
Ganga Action Plan - A 2007 Review Ganga Action Plan - A 2007 Review
Ganga Action Plan - A 2007 Review
 

Recently uploaded

IAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI Solutions
IAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI SolutionsIAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI Solutions
IAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI Solutions
Enterprise Knowledge
 
EIS-Webinar-Prompt-Knowledge-Eng-2024-04-08.pptx
EIS-Webinar-Prompt-Knowledge-Eng-2024-04-08.pptxEIS-Webinar-Prompt-Knowledge-Eng-2024-04-08.pptx
EIS-Webinar-Prompt-Knowledge-Eng-2024-04-08.pptx
Earley Information Science
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)
Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)
Powerful Google developer tools for immediate impact! (2023-24 C)
 
GenCyber Cyber Security Day Presentation
GenCyber Cyber Security Day PresentationGenCyber Cyber Security Day Presentation
GenCyber Cyber Security Day Presentation
 
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected WorkerHow to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
 
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected WorkerHow to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
 
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men
08448380779 Call Girls In Friends Colony Women Seeking Men
 
Boost PC performance: How more available memory can improve productivity
Boost PC performance: How more available memory can improve productivityBoost PC performance: How more available memory can improve productivity
Boost PC performance: How more available memory can improve productivity
 
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
Strategies for Unlocking Knowledge Management in Microsoft 365 in the Copilot...
 
ProductAnonymous-April2024-WinProductDiscovery-MelissaKlemke
ProductAnonymous-April2024-WinProductDiscovery-MelissaKlemkeProductAnonymous-April2024-WinProductDiscovery-MelissaKlemke
ProductAnonymous-April2024-WinProductDiscovery-MelissaKlemke
 
The Role of Taxonomy and Ontology in Semantic Layers - Heather Hedden.pdf
The Role of Taxonomy and Ontology in Semantic Layers - Heather Hedden.pdfThe Role of Taxonomy and Ontology in Semantic Layers - Heather Hedden.pdf
The Role of Taxonomy and Ontology in Semantic Layers - Heather Hedden.pdf
 
IAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI Solutions
IAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI SolutionsIAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI Solutions
IAC 2024 - IA Fast Track to Search Focused AI Solutions
 
Workshop - Best of Both Worlds_ Combine KG and Vector search for enhanced R...
Workshop - Best of Both Worlds_ Combine  KG and Vector search for  enhanced R...Workshop - Best of Both Worlds_ Combine  KG and Vector search for  enhanced R...
Workshop - Best of Both Worlds_ Combine KG and Vector search for enhanced R...
 
presentation ICT roal in 21st century education
presentation ICT roal in 21st century educationpresentation ICT roal in 21st century education
presentation ICT roal in 21st century education
 
Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...
Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...
Apidays Singapore 2024 - Building Digital Trust in a Digital Economy by Veron...
 
What Are The Drone Anti-jamming Systems Technology?
What Are The Drone Anti-jamming Systems Technology?What Are The Drone Anti-jamming Systems Technology?
What Are The Drone Anti-jamming Systems Technology?
 
EIS-Webinar-Prompt-Knowledge-Eng-2024-04-08.pptx
EIS-Webinar-Prompt-Knowledge-Eng-2024-04-08.pptxEIS-Webinar-Prompt-Knowledge-Eng-2024-04-08.pptx
EIS-Webinar-Prompt-Knowledge-Eng-2024-04-08.pptx
 
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organizationScaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
Scaling API-first – The story of a global engineering organization
 
Axa Assurance Maroc - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
Axa Assurance Maroc - Insurer Innovation Award 2024Axa Assurance Maroc - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
Axa Assurance Maroc - Insurer Innovation Award 2024
 
04-2024-HHUG-Sales-and-Marketing-Alignment.pptx
04-2024-HHUG-Sales-and-Marketing-Alignment.pptx04-2024-HHUG-Sales-and-Marketing-Alignment.pptx
04-2024-HHUG-Sales-and-Marketing-Alignment.pptx
 
GenAI Risks & Security Meetup 01052024.pdf
GenAI Risks & Security Meetup 01052024.pdfGenAI Risks & Security Meetup 01052024.pdf
GenAI Risks & Security Meetup 01052024.pdf
 
Strategies for Landing an Oracle DBA Job as a Fresher
Strategies for Landing an Oracle DBA Job as a FresherStrategies for Landing an Oracle DBA Job as a Fresher
Strategies for Landing an Oracle DBA Job as a Fresher
 

Fertilizer in agriculture of india

  • 1. FERTILIZER IN AGRICULTURE OF INDIA TECHNOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT FOR SUSTAINABLE AGRO-INDUSTRY
  • 2. INPUTS FOR HIGHER AGROPRODUCTIVITY • Quality seeds • Irrigation and drainage • Fertilizer • Protect against insects, pests, diseases: agrochemicals
  • 3. Sixteen elements are required by the crops: • Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, [from water and air], • Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium, [macro], • Calcium, Magnesium, Sulphur, Chlorine,[micro], • Iron, Manganese, Silicon, Boron, Zinc, Copper, Nickel, Molybdenum and Selenium [Traces]
  • 4. The amount and relative proportion of these nutrients will depend on a number of factors. The most important factors are: (i) nutrient status of soil and (ii) nutrient requirement of the crop.
  • 5. TYPES OF FERTILIZERS • Organic fertilizer or manure • Chemical fertilizer • Bio-fertilizer • Composted manure • Vermi - composted manure
  • 6. Organic Manure • Organic manure not only provides plant nutrients but also improves soil physical, chemical and biological properties. • In addition to fertilizers, the use or organic manure is essential for sustaining crop productivity. • Preparation of good quality manure
  • 7. Fill the mixture of dung, urine and other materials layer by layer ; moistening it each time. Add suitable inoculum to hasten the rate of decomposition of manure. Enrich the mixture with 100 kg of rock phosphate/bone meal/ superphosphate to improve the nutrient content of manure. Seal the pit with mud plaster after it is filled. The manure ready for use after 4-6 months.
  • 8. Primary Nutrients • Nitrogen: Ammonia or nitrate salts • Phosphorus: Water soluble phosphates of calcium, Di-ammonium phosphate • Potassium: Potassium chloride
  • 9. Integrated Plant Nutrient Management (IPNM) It aims at maintaining soil fertility and plant nutrient supply for sustainable crop productivity by adjusting • chemical fertilizer, • organic manure, • biofertilizer and • crop residues. Different proportions of these components are to be used based upon crop requirements and availability of materials
  • 10. IPNM will be the means through which the longterm fertility of the soil will be assured and contamination of the environment minimized. Yet, IPNM alone will not be sufficient to bring this about; farmers need to adopt effective and efficient crop, pest, soil, and water management techniques as well. Governments have an important role to play to promote effective and environmentally sound management of plant nutrients.
  • 11. Institutions have to promote effective and environmentally sound management of o plant nutrients, o improve research, o monitoring, o participation, and o extension of effective plant nutrient management.
  • 12. Governments have to support complementary measures to lower costs, recycle urban waste, secure land tenure. Also it is necessary to increase production capacity, to improve transport and communication infrastructure, and to establish an effective institutional environment conducive to the efficient functioning of nutrient, other input and output markets.
  • 13. The cropping system rather than the individual crop and the farming system rather than the individual field are the focus of this approach for developing IPNM systems for major agro-ecological zones and for various categories of farms. Control of pests and diseases in agriculture is very important. Earlier approaches of insecticides applications to contain pests is no longer desirable because of their increasing costs and the adverse effects on the environment. Therefore, the concept of IPM all over the world has assumed great importance.
  • 14. General nutrient recommendation for some important crops
  • 15. Bio fertilizers (BF) (microbial inoculants) are the products containing living cells of different types of micro organisms (bacteria, fungi, actinomycetes, etc.) which have the ability to fix atmospheric nitrogen and mobilize phosphorus in the soil from unavailable form to plant usable form. Use of Rhizobium culture in legumes is most promising among different kinds of biofertilizers
  • 16. Vermi-Compost Vermi-composting uses earthworms to produce compost from organic residues. Earthworms can practically eat all kinds of organic matter. The guidelines for preparing a good quality vermi - compost should be adopted.
  • 17. CHEMICAL FERTILIZERS EXPENSIVE, TO PRODUCE THOUGH NEEDED INPUT FOR HIGH YIELDING FOOD CROPS, EXCESS CAN CAUSE ENVIRONMENTAL ADVERSE IMPACT
  • 18. Total P content in soil is usually high, but most of this soil P pool is not in forms available for plant uptake (insoluble in water). Bacteria that can mobilize P from unavailable soil pools and increase P availability to plants are of great importance. Most predominant phosphorus-solubilizing bacteria (PSB) belong to the genera Bacillus and Pseudomonas. Field experiments highlight the potential importance of PSB.
  • 19. phosphorus-solubilizing bacteria (PSB) o Sundara et al. (2002) applied rock phosphate with a PSB (Bacillus megaterium var. phosphaticum) in lignite-based culture medium in a field experiment. o They found that PSB amendment could increase sugarcane yield by 12.6 percent. o PSB and P fertilizer together reduced the P requirement by 25 percent.
  • 20. Furthermore, 50 percent of the costly superphosphate could be replaced with inexpensive rock phosphate. PSB also improved the sugar yield and juice quality (Sundara et al., 2002). In conclusion, biofertilizer based on PSB may be of greatest value in allowing use of cheaper P sources.
  • 21. Indo Maroc Phosphore S A (IMACID), Chambal's world-class joint venture phosphoric acid plant in Morocco, commenced production in November 1999. The US$ 204 million joint venture project, in equal participation with Office Cherifien Des Phosphates (OCP) of Morocco, produces 3,30,000 tonnes per annum of merchant grade phosphoric acid (54% of P2O5). OCP is the largest producer of phosphoric acid in the world.
  • 22. Phosphoric acid is a raw material for production of DAP and other complex fertilizer grades. Zuari Industries Limited buys its entire phosphoric acid requirements from IMACID. This arrangement ensures an uninterrupted supply of phosphoric acid to the Company to produce DAP and also helps bridge the gap between demand and supply of phosphoric acid, since India imports over 80% of its phosphoric acid requirement.
  • 23. Fertilizers are basic nutrients supplied to soil, which replenish the depletion or original deficiency of nutrients in the soil. India is third largest producer and consumer of chemical fertilizers in the world, and accounts for 12% of the world consumption. The consumption of chemical fertilizers in 1999 was 75.26 kg/hectare. The net sown area in India for food grains production is about 141 million hectares.
  • 24. Raw materials like phosphate rock, sulphur and potassium salts are imported. Indigenously produced fertilizer meets only about eighty per cent of the country’s fertilizer need. Indian fertilizer industry has played a significant role in increasing food grains production along with high yielding varieties of seeds and enhanced irrigation facilities, during the green revolution of last thirty years. Growth in fertilizer application took place from 78.4 lakh tonnes in 1965-66 to about 140 lakh tonnes in 1995-96.
  • 25. The estimated food grain consumption in 2011-12 is 298 million tonnes. To achieve this target an increase in consumption of fertilizers to185.8 kg/ hectare is needed The development of chemical fertilizer industry in India took place in three phases. From 1950-65, the awareness of the usefulness of chemical fertilizers in enhancing the crop yield increased along with due consideration for the practice of application of organic manures and green manures. During this period manufacturing facilities increased gradually.
  • 26. From the year 1965, increase in farm productivity was given more importance and growth in fertilizer production and application was enhanced significantly. To provide fertilizers to farmers at reasonable price, the Government of India from 1977 operated the retention price cum subsidy scheme. The producers were provided compensation by the Govt. for supplying fertilizers at the controlled price.
  • 27. In the mid-seventies prices of hydrocarbon raw materials increased, followed by the mid-eighties finding the increase in yield per mass of fertilizer applied reaching a saturated stage. Over the years, the cost of production has increased and subsidy amount provided to industry greatly increased. In 1992, decontrol of the prices of phosphatic and potassic fertilizers were introduced. This was done as a part of a policy, which was meant to bring the fertilizer industry in line with the liberalized and. Pro-market economic policies.
  • 28. The synergy between the application of inorganic fertilizer and the development of nutrientresponsive seed varieties was responsible for the phenomenal growth in crop yields and food supplies in developed countries over the past thirty-five years. The ability of agriculture to provide for food needs to the year 2020 and beyond is increasingly difficult however.
  • 29. In developed countries, over-application of inorganic and organic fertilizers has led to environmental damage, while in developing countries, population pressures, land constraints, and the decline of traditional soil management practices have led to a decline in the fertility of the soil.
  • 30. The over-supply of nutrients from inorganic and organic sources in excess of plant needs and in the absence of a mechanism to bind the nutrients to the soil, can lead to environmental contamination. Soil nitrate concentrations in excess of plant absorption needs, for example, allow the soluble nitrate to be carried away in ground water to contaminate surface waters and underground aquifers.
  • 31. Consumption of water high in nitrate (and nitrite) has been linked to • “blue baby syndrome,” • goitre, • birth defects and • heart disease, and may be involved in the creation of carcinogenic compds within the body that can cause stomach or liver cancers.
  • 32. Leaching and run-off of nitrogen and phosphorus into rivers, lakes, and inlets, can cause eutrophication--an excess accumulation of nutrients in water that promotes algal over- production. Heavy application of inorganic NPK fertilizers does not replace secondary and other micro-nutrients removed by harvested crops, crop residue and erosion, nor do they directly improve soil organic matter content and structure.
  • 33. Lastly, genetic engineering offers the potential in the future for the plants themselves to meet some of their nutrient requirements. Together, these nutrient conservation and replenishment methods need to be managed - reflecting the farmer's particular bio-physical and socio-economic situations, in such a way as to provide a cost effective and appropriate level of nutrients to maximize yields and sustain agriculture, without polluting the environment.