New method yields more rice with less water-Oxfam

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – Rice farmers could boost their yields by 50  percent with a new method that uses less water Oxfam America said yesterday  as climate change and drought threaten the staple crop.

Growing rice — considered the major calorie source for about half the  world’s population — is water-intensive, accounting for as much as one-third  of the planet’s annual freshwater use, said Oxfam, a development group.

Rice farmers normally rely on flooding their fields to keep seeds covered  in water throughout the growing season.
But the new method, known as the System of Rice Intensification, or SRI,  involves planting seedlings farther apart, keeping fields moist instead of  flooding them, transplanting seedlings to fields earlier and weeding manually,  Oxfam said in a report.

Farmers using SRI in parts of Africa, Southeast Asia and India have been  able to produce as much as 50 percent more rice with less water, and often with  less labor, said the report, written with U.S.-based nonprofit Africare and the  Worldwide Fund for Nature.
Oxfam’s goal is to encourage rice-producing countries to convert 25 percent  of rice cultivation to SRI by 2025.

“Practices like SRI can both easily translate to increased production and  income for farmers,” Oxfam President Ray Offenheiser said yesterday at an  event in Washington.

“The benefits have been tangible, improving livelihoods,” he said.
Drought is a top concern for rice producers like Vietnam, where a water  shortage this year could hurt production in a key area accounting for 90  percent of the nation’s rice exports.

A new study from the U.S. National Center for Atmospheric Research said the  world’s most populous areas could face severe droughts in the next few  decades.

The group wants governments in developing countries to adopt SRI in  national development strategies and hopes aid agencies invest in training  farmers to use the method.

Duddeda Sugunavva, a farmer from the Andhra Pradesh state in southeastern  India, said it took her a couple of seasons to get used to the new method after  she learned about it from an aid group.

But she told the audience yesterday that she harvests about 50 percent  more rice per acre using the system.
“The population is increasing, but the land is not increasing,” she said at  the Oxfam event. “I want all women farmers to come forward and do SRI.”