Sri Lanka receives first consignment of non-harmful Nano Nitrogen liquid fertiliser from India to boost paddy, maize cultivation: Official


PTI | Colombo | Updated: 20-10-2021 12:41 IST | Created: 20-10-2021 12:20 IST
Sri Lanka receives first consignment of non-harmful Nano Nitrogen liquid fertiliser from India to boost paddy, maize cultivation: Official
Representative image Image Credit: Pixabay
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  • Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka has received the first consignment of 3.1 million liters of high-quality non-harmful Nano Nitrogen liquid fertilizer from India to help the island nation's Eastern province in the cultivation of maize and paddy, the country's Agriculture Secretary Prof Udith Jayasinghe said on Wednesday.

The import of Nano Nitrogen liquid fertilizer came months after President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s decision in May to stop chemical fertilizer imports sparked anger and widespread protests in the farmland districts of the country.

''This is the first lot of the full lot of 3.1 million liters and the use of these are not harmful,'' Prof Jayasinghe said while speaking to reporters here.

“This is a high-quality Indian product which has come for praise from the Indian Prime Minister (Narendra) Modi,” Jayasinghe said.

He said they will further dispatch as a priority to cultivation areas in the Eastern province for maize and paddy cultivators’ use.

Even some members within the ruling coalition have urged the government to reconsider the ban on chemical fertilizers as the production of crops is going down.

Giving a hearing to the tea industry, the government a few weeks ago relaxed the ban allowing certain kinds of chemical fertilizers.

''Because there has been a quality drop-in tea that was produced in factories, the government has decided to import sulfate of ammonia,'' the government spokesman and minister Ramesh Pathirana said earlier this week.

Rajapaksa had decided to impose a total ban on agrochemicals saying he wanted to make Sri Lankan farming 100 percent organic.

He opted for the local production of organic fertilizer.

Analysts said the decision was primarily caused by the dearth of foreign reserves in US dollars to pay for the imports.

Sri Lanka’s annual fertilizer imports cost 400 million US dollars, President Rajapaksa said. 

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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