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China
Progress
and Activities
2007 updates:
• SRI
in Zhejiang and Sichuan Provinces Now Over 200,000 ha.
Through the efforts of colleagues in the National China
Rice Research Institute and the Sichuan Academy of Agricultural Sciences
working with other research, university and government institutions
in their respective provinces, the area under SRI methods in Zhejiang
and Sichuan Provinces has reached, according to extension programs,
110,000 and 120,000 hectares, respectively. See trip report by
Norman Uphoff for details on the SRI activities in both provinces.
There is additional SRI in other provinces such as Jiangsu, Hunan
and Guizhou that we do not have information about, and also the 'sister'
innovation known as 3-S, developed independently of SRI but similar
in most respects, is spreading in Heilungjiong Province in the far
north of China.
In Zhejiang,
one of the
most technically 'advanced' townships has 80% SRI already. Two
'stereotypes' about SRI -- that is is only good for small farmers,
and that it is too labor-intensive for widespread adoption -- are
challenged by the Zhejiang experience where large farmers are the
quickest to adopt SRI methods -- in part because they are able
to make them labor-saving. (See trip
report for more details).
2005
updates:
• 2005 was a very bad season climatically for rice
farmers in Eastern China, as three typhoons hit Zhejiang and other
provinces in August-September, considerably
damaging the summer rice crop. Fortunately, the SRI fields of Nie
Fu-qiu (pictured in center of photo at left; click on photo to
enlarge), farmer-leader in Bu Tou village, Tian Tai township, withstood
the effects of the strong winds and rain while neighboring fields
succumbed. His harvested yield was 11.38 t/ha despite the adverse
climate, with a grain-set ratio of 93.4%, according to Dr. Lin
Xianqing, senior researcher at the China National Rice Research
Institute in Hangzhou, who has been monitoring SRI experience in
Nie Fu Qu’s
village for the past three years.
Nie
Fu-qiu (left) has been experimenting with variations of SRI concepts,
and with direct-seeding (using a drill of his own design and making)
and no-till cultivation methods (see trip
report from Uphoff visit to Bu Tou in summer 2005). In two nearby
villages, 438 households decided to follow Nie Fu-qiu's example
by planting 65 ha of paddy with SRI methods this season. We do not
have information on their results yet. (Click on photo to enlarge).
1999-2004:
• At the end of the 2004 main season, the Center for Integrated Agricultural
Development (CIAD) at China Agricultural University in Beijing sent
a three-person team to evaluate the socio-economic impact of SRI uptake in
a village in Sichuan Province where use of the new methods had gone from
7 farmers in 2003 to 398 farmers in 2004, thinking that this rate and kind
of adoption of an agricultural innovation warranted investigation and explanation.
The evaluation is available in both English and
Chinese.
• SRI
evaluations began in 1999-2000 after Chinese researchers learned
about SRI from an ILEIA article by Justin Rabenandrasana, Association
Tefy Saina, in 1999, and seminars by N. Uphoff on SRI at China
Agricultural University and Nanjing Agricultural University in
December 1998 and at IRRI (Los Baños) in March 1999. Trials
were undertaken at Nanjing Agricultural University by Dr. Cao Weixing,
the China National Hybrid Rice Research and Development Center
by Prof. Yuan Longping, and the China National Rice Research Institute
by Dr. Zhu Defeng. A Chinese version of SRI had been developed
independently at Northeast Agricultural University by Prof. Jin
Xueyong between 1994 and 1999, and it began to spread in Heilungjiong
Province about the same time that SRI results were being confirmed
at these other institutions, as well as by the Sichuan Academy
of Agricultural Sciences by Dr. Zheng Jiaguo. Thus there are many
centers of activity on SRI in China. For more details, see reports
and articles, SRI evaluations, and
SRI workshops.
• An international
SRI conference was hosted by Prof. Yuan Longping in April 2002,
at Sanya, Hainan, co-sponsored by the China National Hybrid Rice
Research and Development Center and the China National Rice Research
Institute together with CIIFAD and Association Tefy Saina. Many
research results on SRI were reported from China and are available
in the conference proceedings
(Ang et al;
Tao et al;
Wang et al;
Yan; Zhu
et al).
• A Chinese
variant of SRI, known as 3-S, has been
developed by Prof. Jin, in the northern province of Heilungjiong,
near Manchuria. This shows that SRI methods can be adapted to very
cold environments. Average 3-S yields are 8.5 t/ha, 40% more than
the usual yield of 6 t/ha in the area while using less costly inputs.
By 2004, 3-S methods, using single, young seedlings, widely spaced,
with unflooded soil and compost, were being applied on over 40,000
ha.
• A
triangular planting method is proving to be a productive adaptation
of SRI concepts. It was developed by Z. B. Liu, manager of the Meishan
Seed Farm in Sichuan Province. This adaptation increases plant density
by 50% while maintaining the beneficial effects of wide spacing.
In 2002, Liu had a yield of 16 t/ha using SRI methods with Super-1
hybrid rice developed by Prof. Yuan. This was certified by the Provincial
Department of Agriculture as the highest yield in Sichuan Province.
This staggered spacing promotes 'the edge effect' for the whole
field.
• Another
SRI adaptation in Sichuan is as part of a rice-mushroom
cropping system. Mushrooms grown for export have become an important
cash crop. However, they require that no agrochemicals are used
on the rice crop as these affect the growth of the mushrooms. It
turns out that the raised beds used for mushrooms work well for
SRI rice, and vice versa, with rice spacing at 40x45 cm. Yields
of 9-10 t/ha of SRI summer rice (May-September) alternating with
a good mushroom crop from November to April give a good farm income.
Also, since straw is needed as organic matter for the mushroom beds,
the greater amount of straw produced with SRI methods permits farmers
to grow one ha of mushrooms for every 5 ha of rice, instead of one
for every 10 ha with usual rice methods.
• A first
national SRI workshop was held in March 2003 with a second workshop
planned for August 2003, being hosted by the Northeast Agricultural
University. The Chinese Ministry of Agriculture has supported ongoing
SRI evaluations by the China
National Rice Research Institute, the China
National Hybrid Rice Research and Development Center, and the
Sichuan Academy of Agricultural
Sciences. Nanjing Agricultural University
has continue doing evaluations since 1999. There are also various
Chinese SRI reports available on the web.
Workshops
Reports
and Articles
- Uphoff,
Norman. 2007. Report
on a visit to China to review SRI progress. Aug. 9-18.
Unpublished trip report. 23 p.
- Uphoff,
Norman T. 2005. Report
of field visits in Zhejiang and Sichuan Provinces, China.
July 28-August 3. Unpublished. 6p.(pdf)
- Jiaguo Zheng
et al. 2004. The
System of Rice Intensification (SRI) for super-high yields of
rice in the Sichuan Basin, in Fischer, T. et al. New directions
for a diverse planet: Proceedings for the 4th International Crop
Science Congress, Brisbane, Australia, 26 September - 1 October.
www.cropscience.org.au
- Six
Proceedings articles by Yuan;
Ang et al;
Tao et al;
Wang et al;
Yan; Zhu
et al) presented at the International conference "Assessments
of the System of Rice Intensification (SRI)," Sanya, China,
April 1-4, 2002
Evaluations
- Xiaoyun,
Li, Xu Xiuli, and Li He. 2004. A
Socio-Economic Assessment of the System of Rice Intensification
(SRI): A Case Study from Xinsheng Village, Jianyang County,
Sichuan Province. College of Humanities and Development,
China Agricultural University. 13p. (pdf) (see also
Chinese version)
- SRI
Practice and Adaptability. 2003.
Zhu Defeng et al, China National Rice Research Institute (CNRRI)
Lu Shihua, Sichuan Academy of Agricultural Sciences (SAAS)
Jin Xueyong, Northeastern Agricultural University (NAU), Harbin
- Jiaguo Zheng
et al. System of Rice Intensification
(SRI) for Super-high Yields of Rice in the Sichuan Basin,
Crop Research Institue, Sichuan Academy of Agricultural Sciences
(SAAS), Chengdu, China
- Jiaguo Zheng
et al. The
System of Rice Intensification (SRI) for super-high yields of
rice in the Sichuan Basin, in Fischer, T. et al (2004). New
directions for a diverse planet: Proceedings for the 4th International
Crop Science Congress, Brisbane, Australia, 26 September - 1 October
2004. www.cropscience.org.au
- Wang Xuehua
and Peng Jiming. 2002. A Comparison between
Sysytem of Rice Intensification and conventional cultivation methods
Chinese National Hybrid Rice Research and Development
- Shaohua Wang
et al. 2001. Growth characterization
and high-yield techniques for paddy rice under SRI management,
Key Laboratory of Crop Growth Regulation, Ministry of Agriculture,
Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing
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