When rice farmers started producing yields nine times larger than normal
in the Malian desert near the famed town of Timbuktu a decade ago, a
passerby could have mistaken the crop for another desert mirage.
Rather, it was the result of an engineering feat that has left experts
in this impoverished nation in awe — but one that has yet to spread
widely through Mali’s farming community.
“We must redouble efforts to get political leaders on board,” said
Djiguiba Kouyaté, a coordinator in Mali for German development agency
GIZ.
With hunger a constant menace, Malians are cautiously turning to a
controversial farming technique to adapt to the effects of climate
change.
FASTFACTS
Up to 20 million farmers now use rice intensification in 61 countries,
including in nearby Sierra Leone, Senegal and Ivory Coast.
Dubbed the System of Rice Intensification (SRI), the new method was
pioneered in Madagascar in 1983. It involves planting fewer seeds of
traditional rice varieties and taking care of them following a strict
regime.
Seedlings are transplanted at a very young age and spaced widely. Soil
is enriched with organic matter, and must be kept moist, though the
system uses less water than traditional rice farming.
Up to 20 million farmers now use SRI in 61 countries, including in
nearby Sierra Leone, Senegal and Ivory Coast, said Norman Uphoff, of the
SRI International Network and Resources Center at Cornell University in
the US.
But, despite its success, the technique has been embraced with varying
degrees of enthusiasm. Uphoff said that is because it competes with the
improved hybrid and inbred rice varieties that agricultural corporations
sell.
For Faliry Boly, who heads a rice-growing association, the prospect of
rice becoming a “white gold” for Mali should spur on authorities and
farmers to adopt rice intensification.
The method could increase yields while also offering a more
environmentally-friendly alternative, including by replacing chemical
fertilizers with organic ones, he said.
He also pointed out that rice intensification naturally lends itself to Mali’s largely arid climate.
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