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Urea
is an important nitrogenous fertiliser and Tata
Chemicals is a major manufacturer of the product
in India
Tata
Chemicals makes urea at its fertiliser complex
in Babrala.
The complex has an installed capacity of 8,64,000
tonnes per year, which constitutes nearly 12 per
cent of the total urea produced by India's private
sector.
The
Babrala
facility, among the best of its kind in India
and comparable to the best in the world, has set
new standards in technology, energy conservation,
productivity and safety. It is the only fertiliser
plant in the country to use dual feedstock: natural
gas or naphtha, or a combination of both.
The
nature of the soil in many Indian regions is such
that nitrogenous fertilisers are an important
input for most crops. It is, thus, important that
farmers have access to good urea at low cost.
Government aid
To make fertilisers available to farmers at affordable
prices and to encourage balanced use, the Indian
government regulates the sale price of fertilisers
and provides a subsidy on urea and concessions
on decontrolled phosphatic and potassic fertilisers.
The government provides subsidy for the production
and use of fertilisers under the retention price-cum-subsidy
scheme (RPS), which was introduced in 1977.
The
main objective of the scheme is to insulate farmers
from fluctuations in fertiliser costs. It is also
intended to ensure that fertiliser consumption
does not suffer, as its growth was an essential
ingredient of the Indian green revolution.
The
RPS scheme is aimed at assuring a reasonable return
on investment to indigenous manufacturers and
to attract further investment in the fertiliser
sector. The scheme has proved its worth in terms
of stimulating higher production and use of fertilisers,
thereby contributing to increased agricultural
production in the country.
The Tata Kisan Sansar
TCL
supplements such government initiatives by undertaking
programmes to educate farmers at the grassroots
level in the proper use of urea manufactured by
it. The company provides these services through
the Tata
Kisan Sansar (TKS).
TKS
is a major initiative undertaken by the company
to provide a package of end-to-end services to
farmers, including the use of modern technology
to help increase yield, soil analysis and advice
on NPK ratios, leasing out farm equipment, and
providing credit.
TCL
supplies quality urea to farmers through the TKS
and through its huge network of distributors.
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