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Expansion of the Cereal Systems Initiative for South Asia in Bangladesh (‘CSISA – BD‘)

Expansion of the Cereal Systems Initiative for South Asia in Bangladesh (‘CSISA – BD‘). Bas Bouman Senior Scientist IRRI ( b.bouman@cgiar.org ) William Collis Director for South Asia WorldFish ( w.collis@cgiar.org ) Andrew McDonald Regional Cropping Systems Agronomist

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Expansion of the Cereal Systems Initiative for South Asia in Bangladesh (‘CSISA – BD‘)

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  1. Expansion of the Cereal Systems Initiative for South Asia in Bangladesh (‘CSISA – BD‘) Bas Bouman Senior Scientist IRRI (b.bouman@cgiar.org) William Collis Director for South Asia WorldFish (w.collis@cgiar.org) Andrew McDonald Regional Cropping Systems Agronomist CIMMYT (a.mcdonald@cgiar.org) GCAP meeting March 28, 2011

  2. What is CSISA?

  3. The original CSISA launched in 2009 Project Goal: To increase food, nutrition, and income security in S. Asia through sustainable intensification of cereal-based systems • Four countries: Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan • Supported by: USAID, Gates Foundation, & World Bank • Collaboratively implemented with many public and private partners

  4. Key CSISA activities • Development, dissemination of sustainable, productive, and economical agricultural management practices & technologies • Strategic partnerships(public + private sectors) to increase the scale and longevity of interventions • Strengthen market linkages and business development – improved technologies alone are not sufficient • Development of high-yielding and stress-tolerant varieties • Capacity building • Policy analysis (IFRPI)

  5. CSISA expansion in Bangladesh • 5-year investment from USAID – Bangladesh (FtF- $24.4 m) • Enterprise-based diversified strategy : includes WorldFish as a core partner • Emphasis on technology delivery, capacity building, and adaptive research (no upstream research, breeding, or policy) • Formation of four new hubs in the South • Strengthening of existing hubs in Central and Northwest (3X more resources at hubs)

  6. CSISA hub domains in Bangladesh • Existing hubs : • Dinajpur (Rajshahi satellite) • Central BD • (Gazipur → Mymensingh) • New hubs for 2011 : • Jessore • Khulna • Barisal • New hubs for 2012 : • Noakhali

  7. Vision of success for CSISA - BD By the end of Year 5 (across six hubs): • 60,000 HH (directly benefited) with net annual income increase of $350 per HH • 300,000 HH (indirectly) through dissemination-related activities • >1 M HH (indirectly) through linkages, synergies and innovative partnerships

  8. The context for CSISA-BD

  9. Importance of smallholder agriculture • Food Security: >40% Bangladesh malnourished. Social safety nets through redistribution etc. are impossible to afford at this scale (>60 M people) • Poverty: Small-scale commercial agriculture remains the main employer and high value agriculture the best opportunity for reducing rural poverty. (Mellor, 2010) • Nutrition: Strong opportunities for health and agriculture professionals to work together to identify and use food, with supplementation as a complement, to solve nutrition issues.

  10. Challenges to agricultural development • Land, Water, labor and energy shortages – competition with other sectors • Increasing costs of production • Stagnating or low rates of productivity growth • Resource loss / degradation (land, water, soil) • Coping with risks and uncertainty: salinity, high temperatures, drought, climate variability

  11. Many are geographically distinct Drought + overuse of groundwater Seasonal inundation, flash flooding Temperature and drought stress Limited-source surface irrigation in the poulders Floods, cyclones, and tidal surges, salinity across the coastal belt

  12. Agriculture can be transformed…. Agronomic Revolution (management gain 2 t / ha, ) The rice revolution in South America Variety revolution (semi-dwarfs – 2 t / ha) • new varieties released Yield ton/ha Peter Jennings, FLAR, 2005 Creation of FLAR .......................1968 2002...................... 1995

  13. Why aren’t improved technologies adopted? KNOWLEDGE CAPITAL INPUTS LABOR RISK Are key messages reaching farmers? Are technologies matched to needs of smallholders?

  14. Why invest in CSISA?

  15. CSISA axioms for success • Farmers manage systems, not • single commodities • There is no universal template for • agricultural development • (Bangladesh is a long way from Punjab) • Blending scientific rigor with • participatory, demand-lead approaches is a must • (neither approach is transformative in isolation) • )

  16. Accelerating progress through partnerships CSISA will use strategic partnerships based on complementary strengths to achieve durable impacts over a large area. • NARs and University partners to develop science-basedsolutions • GOs Line Agencies: to build capacity and mainstream programs through DAE / DoF / DLS and their extensive networks of trainers • National and International NGOs: BRAC, RDRS and others who offer credit and business services at scale. • USAID programs (e.g. MYAPs): to leverage existing socials networks and close interactions with communities and individual households. • Private sector: to collaboratively develop and refine machinery, cultivar evaluations, best practices for agro-chemicals, and as a disseminate channel for management information (e.g. through agro-dealers)

  17. CSISA approach is based on the ‘InnovationHub’ • Areas united by similar agricultural systems, production opportunities and challenges. • Provide a geographic focus • for collaborative innovation, • learning, and dissemination. • Brings together regional • partners – private sector, • GOs & NGOs, universities, • farmer groups • Provide a basis for local identification and participatory testing of improved seed and appropriate management technologies.

  18. Representative CSISA-BD priorities

  19. Technology targeting (e.g. elite seed) In collaboration with the GoB, the private sector, and NGOs, CSISA BD will identify ways to increase seed accessibility to farmers. Better matching of new seeds with the right production environments will accelerate this progress by setting needs-based distribution domains for elite seed. Submergence tolerant rice GIFT Tilapia Salt tolerant maize

  20. Coping with water and labor scarcity Reduced costs Minimum or zero tillage Residue retention Crop Rotation Resilience to climate risks Higher, more stable yields Increased profitability Water use efficient Improved soil quality

  21. Profitable system transitions • Reduce risk • Increase production • intensity • Increase income • and income • reliability In areas with winter fallows, enabling rabi crops using CA, stress tolerant varieties etc. In water rich areas, diversified cropping systems that include aquaculture. In the saline belt, promote shrimp culture.

  22. Increasing resource use efficiency Declining water tables and higher pumping costs for irrigation negatively affect yield and profitability of winter crops. CSISA-BD will evaluate, refine, and disseminate management approaches which can increase the efficiency of water utilization such as AWD for rice and bed planting for wheat.

  23. Precision ag and new modes of outreach General recommendations for fertilizers and other inputs are often not optimal, but improved ‘site-specific’ management approaches must be modified for the conditions of smallholders. CSISA-BD is collaborating with IPNI to develop a ‘Nutrient Manager’ tool which can easily and economically be used in BD.

  24. Developing entrepreneurship • Small-scale commercialization of inputs and service provision offer strong possibilities for achieving impact at scale by overcoming bottlenecks such as the cost of machinery, training, etc. • CSISA-BD will offer: • technical training, • market linkages, • examples of viable businessmodels for new entrepreneurs • marketing advise

  25. Gender mainstreaming Women manage many facets of agricultural production in Bangladesh that are central to HH nutrition and income generation. CSISA is identifying ways through which women farmers and entrepreneurs can increase productivity and profitability. Specific training opportunities and outreach methods will be geared towards women.

  26. Training and continuing education • Education is a cornerstone for • national Food Security • Current linkages between formal • knowledge sources and technology • delivery system are weak. • Continuing education is lacking for • GO and NGO staff as well as for • private sector agro- dealers and • service providers. • CISISA-BD will partner with research institutions, universities, and professional societies to create broad-based education programs. Many players, insufficient strategy

  27. Strengthening regional linkages Linking national systems with the private sector. Bangladesh to India and back again….. CSISA has a close working relationship with machinery manufacturers in India. These ties are being leverage to identify new market opportunities for scale- appropriate mechanization in Bangladesh, including new seeders for the Chinese ‘two wheel’ tractor.

  28. Impact pathways and enterprises Farmers manage enterprises, not single commodities. CSISA-BD focuses on integrated approaches to agricultural development. AWD to reduce rice water requirements Canal management (increase water supply) Improved feeding and income generation Intensified rabi cropping

  29. Thank You

  30. APPENDIX – CIMMYT PRIORITIES BASED ON FGD

  31. Characteristics of the Southern Hubs • Cropping systems that do not favor winter crops (late transplanting of rice, and in cases longer duration rice varieties) • Insufficient winter irrigation • silted canals with limited storage capacity (no groundwater) • advancing riverine salt front • high costs of pumping and declining water table • Significant areas of fallow due to poorly drained fields, limited source irrigation, and late on-set salinity • labor $ issues, outmigration for work • low rates of mechanization • inadequate internal feed sources for livestock and fish; purchased feeds of variable quality and expensive • low or no use of fertilizer for most rabi crops

  32. Dissemination / demonstration priorities • Improved post-harvest storage technologies and increased capacity (avoiding early sale when prices are low) • Better-bet fertilizer recommendations, eventually domain or site specific (linked with research progress) • Legume seed inoculation • Mini-kit distribution of newly released winter crops varieties from Bina and BARI, including those with better salt tolerance and shorter growth duration (Kulna, Barisal). Awareness raising of the importance of newer varieties and seed replacement. • Introduction of high-efficiency pumps (CSU) • Highlight the issue of canal maintenance and implications for productivity / livelihoods to the water board, LGED, and other relevant agencies • Market linkages (regional) and development (local) for emerging rabi crops through value chain approaches • Mechanized seeding to reduce labor requirements

  33. Applied research priorities • Agronomic and economic performance of relay establishment of rabi crops in rice for high and medium highlands. • Agronomic and economic performance of dedicated forage crops (barley, wheat, napier grass) in areas that remain fallow due to late drainage. • Agronomic and economic performance of CA-based crop management practices (single-pass strip tillage + seeding or surface seeding + anchored residue retention). • Evaluation of commercially-available maize hybrids • Yield response trials to macro, secondary, and micronutrients ( • Mechanized bed planting options to increase irrigation efficiency and arsenic mitigation (Jessore) • Bed planting for Aman season vegetable production • FEAST-type feeding evaluation tools for livestock and fish to assess the value of increases in maize, oilseed, and fodder production

  34. PhD Research Topics • Landscape model of ISF as influenced by flooding, soil type, and management practices. • Site-specific fertilizer recommendations based on water-limited yield targets and ISF. • Strategies for enterprise-based irrigation water allocation (limited source in winter) with and without agronomic interventions (i.e. CA, cropping system modifications) • Optimal establishment dates for rice seedbeds based on agro-climatological analysis as well as adjustments based on medium to short-range monsoon forecasts. Part of larger agronomic and modeling study (w/ IRRI and IFAD funding) to increase total yields in rice-wheat (and other rabi) systems. • Reducing tradeoffs between livestock feeding and crop residue retention. • Irrigation timings for different crops in water-limited areas (e.g. if you have two irrigations to give, when to give them?).

  35. IFAD and Conservation Agriculture: research complements to CSISA “Sustainable Intensification of Maize-Livestock Farming Systems in Hill Areas of South Asia” Jharkhand and Hill Areas of Nepal – with ILRI “Accelerating resource-conserving technology (RCT) adoption to improve food security and rural livelihoods while reducing adverse environmental impacts in the Indo-Gangetic Plains.” India, Nepal, and Bangladesh – with IRRI

  36. High risk, low investment agriculture Hill areas of Nepal ‘Poverty Corridor’ of India Rainfed and water-limited = low cropping intensity, low productivity

  37. Immediate yield gains + lower production costs = low barrier to entry

  38. Optimal residue allocation strategies in mixed crop-livestock systems CA can increase residue supply, thereby reducing potential conflicts (residue allocation with CA is not a zero sum game) More effort is required to identify minimum residue requirements required to achieved the benefits of CA

  39. Example IFAD hill maize activities • Single and layered interventions for increasing maize productivity • CA (line sowing etc.) vs. FP • hybrids vs. OPVs • improved nutrient management vs. FP • improved weed control vs. FP • Enabling double cropping with CA in winter fallow regions (choice of maize hybrid optimized wrt yield potential and growth duration; productivity and feed value of second crop evaluated) • Weed population dynamics with CA establishment, residue retention levels, and soil fertility • Mechanical options for weed control w/ CA • Improving maize planting geometry and fertilizer management practices for intercrop systems • Identifying minimum residue retention requirements in CA-based systems for yield and tradeoff minimization (with ILRI). • Identification of improved crop production and livestock feeding strategies to increase farm enterprise productivity and profitability (with ILRI).

  40. Example IFAD DSR activities • Time of planting influences on direct seeded rice establishment, yields, and irrigation requirements (field and simulation – risk and productivity focus). • Cultural practices and weed population dynamics in DSR • Agronomic nitrogen use efficiency as affected by crop establishment, deep fertilizer placement, and water management • Varietal screening in DSR and conventional transplanting • Brown manuring: balancing weed suppression, N fixation, and rice growth • Characterizing cracking behaviour in puddled and non-puddled soils: implications for irrigation efficiency and optimal water management practices • Evaluating the on-farm water management practices and economics of TPR, DSR, and non-puddled transplanted rice

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