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ACCOUNTING FOR INVENTORIES IN LIVESTOCK, AGRICULTURE, FORESTRY, AND MINERAL OIL & GAS INDUSTRIES

1. INTRODUCTION

Inventories represent significant current assets in industries where production cycles are long, market prices volatile, biological transformation inherent, and environmental factors critical. Livestock, agricultural produce, forestry products, and extractive outputs such as crude oil and natural gas require sector-specific accounting because traditional inventory methods are insufficient for fair representation.

ICAI, Ind AS, IFRS, and international frameworks recognise this uniqueness and prescribe specialised guidance. This article provides a consolidated, academically structured, professionally rigorous treatment of inventory accounting in these sectors, combining:

  • Recognition and measurement principles
  • NRV-based valuation
  • Fair value requirements under Ind AS 41 / IAS 41
  • Numerical illustrations
  • Corporate case studies
  • Cross-country comparison
  • Disclosure formats and accounting policies

The objective is to deliver a detailed reference document suitable for Chartered Accountants, auditors, bankers, and financial analysts.

2. REGULATORY AND CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK

2.1 ICAI Framework

ICAI mandates compliance with applicable Ind AS for companies falling under its thresholds. Two standards govern most inventory-related issues:

Ind AS 2 — Inventories:

Applies to harvested agricultural produce, felled timber, crude oil stockpiles, refined inventory, processed goods, and stores & spares.

Ind AS 41 — Agriculture:

Governs biological assets until the point of harvest; valuation is at fair value less costs to sell.

ICAI’s Guidance Notes on:

  • Accounting for Agriculture
  • Accounting for Forestry
  • Accounting for Extractive Industries
  • Accounting for Livestock
  • enhance interpretation.

2.2 Ind AS / IFRS Framework

Ind AS 2 ↔ IAS 2 (post-harvest inventory)

Ind AS 41 ↔ IAS 41 (biological assets)

Ind AS 106 ↔ IFRS 6 (exploration & evaluation)

Ind AS 41 requires biological assets to be measured at fair value less costs to sell. After harvest, Ind AS 2 takes over using cost/NRV rules.

2.3 International Practices

United States (US GAAP)

No fair value requirement for biological assets

ASC 330 governs inventories

Extractive industries follow Full Cost or Successful Efforts Method

European Union (EU)

IFRS adopted widely

Sustainability-linked disclosures required

Agricultural produce measured at fair value until harvest

3. DEFINITIONS AND KEY CONCEPTS

3.1 Inventory (Ind AS 2)

Items held for sale, in production, or to be consumed in production.

3.2 Biological Assets

Living plants and animals undergoing biological transformation.

3.3 Agricultural Produce

Harvested output from biological assets.

3.4 Fair Value

Market-based measurement reflecting exit price.

3.5 Net Realisable Value (NRV)

Estimated selling price minus:

  • costs to complete
  • costs to sell

3.6 Cost Formula

FIFO

Weighted average

Specific identification (for unique items)

4. INDUSTRY-WISE INVENTORY ACCOUNTING TREATMENT

4.1 LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY

4.1.1 Nature of Inventories

  • Breeding stock
  • Dairy animals
  • Poultry (broilers, layers)
  • Aquaculture species
  • Output: milk, eggs, wool, meat

4.1.2 Initial Recognition

Biological assets measured at fair value less costs to sell.

Post-harvest items (milk, eggs) measured under Ind AS 2 at cost/NRV.

4.1.3 Key Valuation Drivers

  • Breed, age, weight
  • Mortality risk
  • Feed cost volatility
  • Market auction prices

4.2 AGRICULTURAL INDUSTRY

4.2.1 Nature of Produce

  • Grains
  • Fruits
  • Vegetables
  • Tea, coffee
  • Cotton, sugarcane

4.2.2 Initial Recognition

Agricultural produce is measured at fair value at the point of harvest. Post-harvest costs (cleaning, grading, storage) fall under Ind AS 2.

4.2.3 Factors Affecting NRV

  • Grade
  • Moisture content
  • Mandi price variation
  • Export parity price

4.3 FORESTRY INDUSTRY

4.3.1 Nature of Inventories

  • Timber
  • Logs
  • Pulpwood
  • Bamboo
  • Resins
  • Rubber sheets

4.3.2 Measurement Considerations

Standing forests = fair value under Ind AS 41

Harvested logs = inventory under Ind AS 2

4.3.3 Valuation Inputs

  • Species
  • Girth & height
  • Moisture content
  • Satellite-based biomass models
  • Forest auction prices

4.4 MINERAL OIL & NATURAL GAS INDUSTRY

4.4.1 Nature of Inventories

  • Crude oil
  • Condensate
  • Natural gas storage
  • Refined products
  • Drilling material & chemicals

4.4.2 Valuation Approach

Cost accumulation depends on:

  • exploration
  • drilling
  • production
  • refining
  • NRV depends on:

Brent/WTI prices

  • refinery margins
  • pipeline tariffs

5. MEASUREMENT PRINCIPLES

5.1 Cost

Cost includes:

purchase cost

conversion cost

overheads

transport

storage (in limited cases)

5.2 Fair Value

Used for biological assets under Ind AS 41.

5.3 Net Realisable Value

NRV = Selling price − Costs to complete − Selling costs

Sector-specific complexities must be disclosed.

6. RECOGNITION AND INITIAL MEASUREMENT

6.1 Livestock

Fair value less costs to sell at reporting date.

6.2 Agricultural Produce

Fair value at point of harvest → deemed cost for Ind AS 2.

6.3 Forestry

Transition from Ind AS 41 to Ind AS 2 after harvesting.

6.4 Oil & Gas

Cost-based measurement; NRV driven by global commodity markets.

7. SUBSEQUENT MEASUREMENT

Lower of cost or NRV (Ind AS 2)

Biological assets remeasured at fair value at each reporting date

8. DISCLOSURE REQUIREMENTS

Entities must disclose:

  • Inventory categories
  • Cost formulas
  • NRV adjustments
  • Fair value assumptions
  • Quantity disclosures (MT, litres, barrels, SCM)
  • Sensitivity analysis
  • Commodity risk exposures

9. ACCOUNTING POLICIES

A complete accounting policy includes:

  • Basis of measurement
  • Treatment of biological assets
  • Methods of apportioning joint costs
  • Fair value hierarchy (Level 1/2/3)
  • NRV methodology
  • Transition from fair value to cost

10. NUMERICAL ILLUSTRATIONS

10.1 Livestock Example: Poultry

Feed cost: 12,00,000

Veterinary: 3,50,000

Labour: 2,00,000

Total cost: 17,50,000

Fair value less costs to sell: 18,20,000

Gain (Ind AS 41): 70,000

10.2 Agriculture Example: Wheat

Cost = 2,450 + 180 = 2,630

NRV = 2,520 – 90 = 2,430

Inventory = 2,430

10.3 Forestry Example: Rubber

Cost per MT = 41,000

NRV = 39,500

Loss = 1,500 per MT

10.4 Oil Refinery Example

Cost = USD 85

NRV = USD 74

Write-down = USD 11/barrel

11. CORPORATE CASE STUDIES

11.1 Indian Dairy Cooperative

Uses actuarial herd valuation

Milk carried at NRV

Biological gains recognised in P&L

11.2 Global Forestry Company

Uses LiDAR for biomass estimation

Timber auction prices determine NRV

11.3 Indian Refinery

Uses average cost method

NRV based on Brent-linked pricing

12. CROSS-COUNTRY COMPARISON India

Fair value for biological assets

NRV for produce Ind AS alignment with IFRS United States Cost model preferred No fair value requirement European Union Stronger sustainability disclosures IFRS 41 adopted

13. INTEGRATED SUMMARY

The four sectors share: high market risk specialised valuation techniques heavy dependence on NRV need for transparent disclosures

14. CONCLUSION

Inventory accounting in these sectors demands rigorous valuation, strong internal data systems, and compliance with ICAI & international standards. Fair value and NRV techniques must be applied consistently with professional judgement

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