The objective of this Standard is to prescribe the accounting treatment and disclosures related to agricultural activity.
G.S.R. 255(E) dated 23rd March, 2022.
1 Inserted vide Notification No. G.S.R. 273(E) dated 30th March, 2019.
Standard is applied. Accordingly, this Standard does not deal with the processing of agricultural produce after harvest; for example, the processing of grapes into wine by a vintner who has grown the grapes. While such processing may be a logical and natural extension of agricultural activity, and the events taking place may bear some similarity to biological transformation, such processing is not included within the definition of agricultural activity in this Standard.
Biological assets | Agricultural produce | Products that are the result of processing after harvest |
Sheep | Wool | Yarn, carpet |
Trees in a timber plantation | Felled Trees | Logs, lumber |
Dairy Cattle | Milk | Cheese |
Pigs | Carcass | Sausages, cured hams |
Cotton plants | Harvested cotton | Thread, clothing |
Sugarcane | Harvested cane | Sugar |
Tobacco plants | Picked leaves | Cured tobacco |
Tea bushes | Picked leaves | Tea |
Grape vines | Picked grapes | Wine |
Fruit trees | Picked fruit | Processed fruit |
Oil palms | Picked fruit | Palm oil |
Rubber trees | Harvested latex | Rubber products |
Some plants, for example, tea bushes, grape vines, oil palms and rubber trees, usually meet the definition of a bearer plant and are within the scope of Ind AS 16. However, the produce growing on bearer plants, for example, tea leaves, grapes, oil palm fruit and latex, is within the scope of Ind AS 41. |
Agricultural activity is the management by an entity of the biological transformation and harvest of biological assets for sale or for conversion into agricultural produce or into additional biological assets.
Agricultural produce is the harvested product of the entity’s biological assets.
A bearer plant is a living plant that:
A biological asset is a living animal or plant.
Biological transformation comprises the processes of growth, degeneration, production, and procreation that cause qualitative or quantitative changes in a biological asset.
Costs to sell are the incremental costs directly attributable to the disposal of an asset, excluding finance costs and income taxes.
A group of biological assets is an aggregation of similar living animals or plants.
Harvest is the detachment of produce from a biological asset or the cessation of a biological asset’s life processes.
5A The following are not bearer plants:
5B When bearer plants are no longer used to bear produce they might be cut down and sold as scrap, for example, for use as firewood. Such incidental scrap sales would not prevent the plant from satisfying the definition of a bearer plant.
5C Produce growing on bearer plants is a biological asset.
Carrying amount is the amount at which an asset is recognised in the balance sheet.
Fair value is the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. (See Ind AS 113 Fair Value Measurement.)
Government grants are as defined in Ind AS 20.
necessarily relevant in measuring fair value, because fair value reflects the current market conditions in which market participant buyers and sellers would enter into a transaction. As a result, the fair value of a biological asset or agricultural produce is not adjusted because of the existence of a contract. In some cases, a contract for the sale of a biological asset or agricultural produce may be an onerous contract, as defined in Ind AS 37 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets. Ind AS 37 applies to onerous contracts.
17-21 [Refer Appendix 1]
2 Substituted vide Notification No. G.S.R. 255(E) dated 23rd March, 2022.
In determining cost, accumulated depreciation and accumulated impairment losses, an entity considers Ind AS 2, Ind AS 16 and Ind AS 36 Impairment of Assets.
Agricultural activity is often exposed to climatic, disease and other natural risks. If an event occurs that gives rise to a material item of income or expense, the nature and amount of that item are disclosed in accordance with Ind AS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements. Examples of such an event include an outbreak of a virulent disease, a flood, a severe drought or frost, and a plague of insects.