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CIIFAD
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2005
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THE
WORLD RICE RESEARCH CONFERENCE,
to be held November 4-7, 2004, in Tokyo and Tsukuba, Japan, will bring
together the world’s leading rice researchers and scientists to exchange
information on the latest breakthroughs and ideas that could benefit
the world’s millions of rice farmers and consumers, and develop improved
livelihoods. A panel
on SRI experience in China, India and other countries will include
nine presentations/papers.
RESEARCH/TRAVEL
GRANTS FOR RICE IN ASIA of up to $3500 are still
available from the Asia Rice Foundation, USA! Applicants must be below
age 30, registered at an accredited institution of higher education
in Asia or the USA. Deadline to apply: September 30, 2004. The grant
will also be offered in 2005.
GOLDEN
APPLE SNAIL - CAN IT REDUCE WEEDS IN SRI RICE?
The golden apple snail (GAS), known as "golden
kuhol", was introduced into the Philippines between 1982 and 1984
as a potential food source for people and farm animals. The GAS subsequently
became a major pest of rice there. Recently, Dr. R. Joshi and his
team at PhilRice have shown that golden kuhol can be managed to control
weeds in transplanted irrigated lowland rice. (See articles by Anne-Margaret
Yu, Emerson
Yago, and the Open
Academy for Philippine Agriculture). SRI promoters in the Philippines
have been working this year to determine whether this technology can
be integrated successfully with SRI methods. For more information
contact R. Joshi at
PhilRice.
MOTORIZED
WEEDER REDUCES SRI LABOR REQUIREMENTS
Mr. Ariyatne Subasinghe, from Hingurakgoda, Sri Lanka, has developed
a motorized weeder designed for saving labor time. He is cultivating
5 acres (2 ha) with SRI methods and finds it difficult to do as many
weedings as recommended for such an area. So he has developed this
weeder, with a Chinese motor, that he can make for about $750, and
which he considers a cost-effective innovation given the yields he
can get with SRI methods. For more information on his weeder and his
innovative methods of crop establishment, click
here.
ADRA
VIDEO
With the initiative
of Bruce Ewart, the ADRA program in Indonesia now working with SRI
with great results has made a professionally-produced video on SRI,
which is to be available to anyone who wants to use it. A different
sound-track (in another language) can be added, with the only proviso
that ADRA be acknowledged as the producer of this video. CIIFAD
has 'streamed' the video so that it is accessible at:
http://streaming1.video.cornell.edu:8080/ramgen/courses/pbsynapsis/
normtest2.rm.
NOTE:
If you are having trouble viewing the video, go to the RealPlayer
website for a free upgrade.
NATIONAL
PRIZE FOR SRI FARMER IN MADAGASCAR
The government
of Madagascar has instituted an annual competition for the best rice
growing in the country, intended to promote the improvement of Madagascar's
rice sector. This July, in the second annual competition, Charlotte
Rasaonandrasana was awarded the first prize -- 100 million CFA (about
$15,000) -- for her paddy yield of 13.5 t/ha, using SRI methods. Last
year, her SRI yield was 10.8 t/ha, already more than triple her pre-SRI
yield of 3 t/ha. These results were measured and certified by agents
of the Ministry of Agriculture. For a report (in French), in L'Express
de Madagascar on the competition and M. Rasaoandrasana's accomplishment,
click on Concours
rizicole 2004.
IRRI
COLUMN ON THE "SRI CONTROVERSY"
The July-September
issue of IRRI's magazine RICE TODAY has a short
piece on SRI in its "Grain of Truth" column written
by Norman Uphoff, Cornell University, countered by an opposing view
of SRI by Thomas Sinclair, USDA-ARS. We note that the latter has never
worked with SRI and has at best only second-hand knowledge of it.
The research that he cites from China to support his opening statement:
"Discussion of the system of rice intensification (SRI) is unfortunate
because it implies SRI merits serious consideration," is contradicted
by many other, larger and more extensive evaluations of SRI in that
country. During this month the URL of this exchange can be found at
the following URL: http://www.irri.org/publications/today/pdfs/3-3/grain3-3.pdf
IMWI
EVALUATION OF SRI IN SRI LANKA
The International
Water Management Institute has published an evaluation of SRI, based
on studying the experience of 120 farmers chosen at random in two
districts (60 SRI farmers and 60 non-SRI farmers). Although the "SRI
farmers" were not yet using all of the recommended SRI practices,
or using them fully, they had a 50% increase in yield, a 90% increase
in water productivity, and a 50-62% increase in labor prooductivity,
with lowered costs of production, so that profitability per ha went
up 100-170%, depending on whether family labor was costed at prevailing
wage rates or not considered in the calculation. Moreover, SRI users
experienced net economic losses in only 4% of their seasons compared
to 28% of seasons for farmers cultivating rice conventionally.The
report is available at the following URL: http://www.iwmi.cgiar.org/pubs/pub075/Report75.pdf
(850kb). The abstract
is also available at http://www.iwmi.cgiar.org/pubs/pub075/Abstract75.pdf
(428kb)
PHILIPPINES
SRI EXPERIENCE BROADENS
A NATIONAL CONFERENCE-WORKSHOP
ON THE SYSTEM OF RICE
INTENSIFICATION (SRI) will take place October 28-30,
2004, at the University of the Philippines Los Baños (UPLB)
- College of Agriculture, Los Baños, Laguna. This initiative
will include technical/scientific discussion on SRI practices and
results in the Philippines to further advance the advocacy of sustainable
rice production systems. For more information, click
here, or see the agenda
(pdf).
A growing number
of institutions -- governmental, educational, non-governmental --
are taking up SRI evaluation and promotion in the Philippines. In
March, 2004, the Department of Agriculture (its research arm, the
Bureau of Agricultural Research; and its extension arm, the Agricultural
Training Institute) and the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice)
hosted seminars on SRI, as did Xavier University in Cagayan de Oro,
Mindanao; Central Luzon State University in Nueva Ecija, and Leyte
State University in the Visayas. The Philippine Rural Reconstruction
Movement (PRRM) hosted a national SRI workshop March 19 with participation
from NGOs and farmer associations from 12 provinces. The National
Irrigation Administration now has evaluations available from its
first year of work with SRI, showing profitability with SRI methods
increasing by 100-200% compared with farmer practice (Caraga
SRI report, Visayas
SRI report). Information on these and other SRI activities is
available in a trip report
by Norman Uphoff from his visit there March 19-28, 2004.
SRI
WORKSHOP IN KERALA, INDIA
The
Mitraniketan Krishi Vigyan Kendra (Farm Science Centre) in Kerala,
India, is conducting a one-day Workshop on System Rice Intensification
(SRI) on November 25, 2004. Scientists with varying SRI experiences
will present the lead papers, followed by a field visit to SRI demonstration
plots. The workshop aims to involve a variety of stakeholders involved
in paddy cultivation, including scientists at the State Agricultural
University, Kerala, Central Institutes of ICAR, extension functionaries
of the State Department of Agriculture, KVKs, NGOs and progressive
farmers. The Farm Science Centre has formed farmers groups to try
SRI methods and supplied seeds and other critical inputs for adopting
this practice. [More
on the Farm Science Center (KVK) activities...]
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