India has not banned the import of urea from Iran and the country has imported 1.6 million tonnes (mt) of the crop nutrient from the West Asian nation till February 15 this fiscal, Parliament was informed today.
India, which buys about 20-30 per cent of its urea requirement, imported almost 2 mt of nitrogenous soil nutrient from Iran in 2011-12 fiscal, Minister of State for Chemicals and Fertilisers Srikant Jena told the Rajya Sabha in a written reply.
The country imported 7.84 mt urea, which included about 2 mt from OMIFCO, Oman, while it produced 21.98 mt of the crop nutrient in the 2011-12 fiscal.
In the 2010-11 financial year, urea imports from Iran touched 1.13 mt, while in the 2009-10 fiscal it stood at 2.76 lakh tonnes, the Minister said quoting official data.
“No,” Jena said replying to the query on whether India has banned the import of urea from Iran vide its April 2012 tender.
Last year, the Government had said that it has removed the restriction on urea imports from Iran and has asked the State Trading Corporation (STC) to modify the global tender, which restricts bids by the suppliers of Iranian origin.
The restriction was imposed by STC in view of Iran’s decision to ban urea exports and also due to default by three traders, who were to supply urea from Iran in a tender floated by Indian Potash Ltd in March this year.
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