|
Article Excerpt Rice feeds more than half the world's population, but yields of the crop have been leveling out, and 400 million are said to endure chronic hunger in rice-producing areas of Asia, Africa and South America. According to the United Nations, demand for rice is expected to rise by a further 38% within 30 years. "Rice is on the front line in the fight against world hunger and poverty," said Jacques Diouf, director-general of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization.
Many farmers all over Asia have already identified low-input, sustainable solutions to the problem.
One simple method that boosts rice yields at much lower cost to farmers originated outside Asia. The System of Rice Intensification (SRI), developed in the late 1980s in Madagascar, has since been spreading to other parts of Africa and to Asia. In Madagascar itself, some 100,000 farmers have converted to it. And more than 20 other countries, from Bangladesh to Thailand, have either adopted SRI, or field tested it, or expressed firm interest. In Cambodia, SRI was unheard of in 2000, but by 2003, nearly 10,000 farmers had converted to it, and that figure may reach 50,000 this year.
Advocates of SRI routinely report yields up to twice or more those achieved by conventional agriculture. However, eminent agronomists are dismissing those claims as "poor record keeping and unscientific thinking," and results of new field trials, published in March 2004 in the journal Field Crop Research, appear to support this view.
History of SRI
SRI was developed nearly 20 years ago by Father Henri de Laulanie, a Jesuit priest who worked with farming communities in Madagascar from 1961 until his death in 1995. In conventional rice growing, the plants spend most of the season partially submerged in water. During a 1983 drought,...
|
|

More articles from Synthesis/Regeneration
Organic production for Ethiopia., December 22, 2005 University of Washington bends biosafety.(spanish flu), December 22, 2005 Mobile phones and brain damage., December 22, 2005 No to GM trees.(Plight of Forests), December 22, 2005 Low lignin GM trees and forage crops.(Plight of Forests), December 22, 2005
Looking for additional articles?
Search our database of over 3 million articles.
Looking for more in-depth information on this industry?
Search our complete database of Industry & Market reports by text, subject, publication
name or publication date.
About Goliath
Whether you're looking for sales prospects, competitive information, company
analysis or best practices in managing your organization,
Goliath can help you meet your business needs.
Our extensive business information databases empower business
professionals with both the breadth and depth of credible,
authoritative information they need to support their business
goals. Whether it be strategic planning, sales prospecting,
company research or defining management best practices -
Goliath is your leading source for accurate information.
|
|