170 likes | 300 Views
Scaling Up SRI The Need for a Major Strategic Shift for Ecologically Sustainable Rice Production in India. Dr. Biksham Gujja Policy Advisor, Global Freshwater Programme Gland, Switzerland 5 th October 2007, Agartala, Tripura. Water: A global challenge.
E N D
Scaling Up SRIThe Need for a Major Strategic Shift for Ecologically Sustainable Rice Production in India Dr. Biksham Gujja Policy Advisor, Global Freshwater Programme Gland, Switzerland 5th October 2007, Agartala, Tripura
Water: A global challenge • 1.1 billion people presently without safe water supply • 2.4 billion people without sanitation • 3-10 million deaths from waterborne diseases • Ecosystem are being rapidly destroyed • Most species-rich ecosystems are in the greatest danger and decline
A water-scarcity crisis • 70% agriculture • 20% industry • 10% urban use WWF LPR 2002 Eradicating malnutrition by 2025, with current productivity, would require additional diversions of water “close to all the water withdrawals at present”, according to IMWI & SIWI
Water Conflicts in India • Driving water demand • Rural areas are dumping grounds • Water conflicts are simmering and occasionally erupt in violence
Last three years… WWF getting infected!! • Evaluating SRI and establishing that it really works • Excitement over large numbers of tillers and grains • Some indication of significant water-saving potential • Some adoption by farmers, but still not widespread
SRI: From Hyderabad to Agartala? • Lot of awareness among politicians, farmers, others • Civil society and government collaboration • SRI practiced in almost all the states to some extent • Some solid research is being done • Independent confirmation • Tripura has progressed with clear targets
SRI: From Hyderabad to Agartala? • Still at national level, very small percentage of area covered • Major rice-growing states are not able to push SRI to the greater extent • Water-saving has not been clearly measured and quantified • Still some scientists and professionals are critical • Some have gotten infected, but SRI is not spreading fast enough, and even some are dis-infected!
SRI presents an opportunity, but major challenges lie ahead • Informing the rice research establishment • Proper information and extension • Research, monitoring and evaluation • Modifications to irrigation infrastructure • Assured power supply enabling farmers to manage their crop with less total water • Potential link to climate change documented • Partnerships of many kinds to be formed
Mini-mission good start, but not ambitious enough?? • 11 mt increase by 2012 • Goal of improving productivity on 20 m.ha. by 500 kg/ha – is this enough? • Allocation of Rs. 12,000 crores (Rs. 2,500/ha -- US$ 700) • SRI is one of the most promising interventions, but how to be spread? what to be done? where? and with whom?
Targets for infection…20 (or 10) by 2020 for 200 • 20 m.ha under SRI management by 2020 • To produce 200 mt of paddy • Rs. 20,000 crores investment • Cost: Rs.2,500/t production, or Rs.1,300/y/5y • Average: 5 t/ha with irrigation; with SRI, 6 t/ha • Can India achieve this?? • India needs a big, ambitious and practical approach. The question is HOW??
Conclusions • Need major strategic shift • Very ambitious mission • Rs. 20,000 for five years • Direct support to farmers • Target of 200 mt increase • Save 100 billion cubic m. water • SRI one option, but a major one • Save money and ecosystems
Thank You Let’s Achieve Quickly “More Rice Per Drop”