tavseef mairaj shah, climate food and farming (cliff) network presentation november 2017
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System of Rice Intensification (SRI) with Intercropping
Tavseef Mairaj ShahInstitute of Wastewater Management and Water Protection
Hamburg University of Technology
Food Sovereignty
World Soil Situation
Water Scarcity (Soil-Water-Food Nexus)
Climate Smart, Resource Efficient Agriculture.
System of Rice Intensification (SRI)
Focus Areas
More calories, less nutrients.
Future climatic conditions are projected to be
worse than ever before.
Smallholders feed at least 70 % of the world
population.
Food Sovereignty
Smallholders: 1 -10 hectare.
More than 500 million smallholder farms worldwide.
Livelihood of more than 2 billion people depends on
small-scale agriculture.
Smallholder agriculture
More than 90% of all farms are smallholder farms but they make up
just 25% percent of the total agricultural land.
Large scale monoculture farming decreases the soil quality in the
long run.
Between 1960-90: 1/3rd of productive soil irreversibly degraded.
Soil Situation
Agriculture makes up to 70% of the world’s total water
consumption.
3000-5000 litres of water per Kg of rice.
With the current ‘Agribusiness Model’ the consumption is
expected to increase by 30% by 2030.
Water scarcity is already visible in South Asia; groundwater is
either receding or becoming too polluted to be used.
Water Scarcity
A strategy that is not just climate-neutral but also contributes to
improvement of the environment.
In view of resource scarcity, a more efficient agro-ecological
strategy.
Food sovereignty: Food security through local and independent
smallholder farms.
What do we need?
Achieving better yields from the same land area while reducing
impacts on environment (climate).
Agro-ecological practices like alternate wetting and dryign, reduced
tillage improve water and soil conservation.
The current paradigm of high input yielding high output is not
indispensable.
Sustainable Intensification
A set of ‘radical’ practices in rice cultivation introduced in
1983 by Henri de Laulanie in Madagascar.
Less is more: Higher yields with lesser resources.
Hailed by many as the ‘most meaningful agricultural
development of the last 50 years’.
System of Rice Intensification (SRI)
Seedlings are transplanted at a younger age—7 to 10 days,
transplanted with wider spacing, no flooding of the field.
Better yields with lesser or no impact on the climate.
It is important because rice is the staple food for at least half the world
population.
http://sri.ciifad.cornell.edu/
What is SRI?
Higher yields, less CH4 emissions. Mitigation and Adaptation.
Global Warming Potential decreases by at least 20-30 %.
Improvement of soil quality, water retention capacity.
Improved resistance to extreme weather events.
Reported SRI Benefits
SRI in Kashmir.SRI Experiment
SRI with Intercropping.SRI Experiments
SRI with Intercropping.Results
Bibliography
Thank you!