Title: water less rice
1Plants bringing perspective for water and food
security
Prem Bindraban
2Global demand for food
World population increase 2000 6 000 000
000 2040 11 000 000 000
Increasing wealth ? meat consumption increases
3Frightening pressure
4Projected demands - 2050
- 5600 km3 additional water required
- 800 km3 from additional irrigation
- 1500 km3 through increased efficiency
- 3300 km3 from transformation of natural
ecosystems and grasslands to croplands (gt330 000
000 hectares - Democratic Republic of Congo and
Tanzania)
5Water use
- Drinking - 2 liter/day
- Basic household needs 100 liter/day
- Food 2600 (vegetarian) 5400 (meat) liter/day
- Agriculture is by far the largest use of water
- Water saving to be sought in this sector
- Plant requirements 1000 liter water for 1 kg
grain
6Agricultural problems in practice - I
Reducing availability of water necessitates
transition in agricultural practices
7Agricultural problems in practice - II
8Transition in agricultural practices
- Changes in crop choice
- Changes in farming / integrated systems
- Development of new agronomic practices
- Exploiting non-terrestrial systems
- Conversion of current cultivation practices
9Changes in farming / integrated systems
10Development of new agronomic practices
11Exploiting non-terrestrial systems
- Minimal improvement of marine crops
- Advanced breeding techniques allow improvement of
marine species - Production potential great
- Novel proteins
- Medicinal aspects
12Water-less rice
Converting inundated rice cultivation into dry
rice
13Why research on rice ecosystems?
- heavy water consumer 2000-5000 l/kg rice
- important food crop 50 of the world population
- in Asia 80 of caloric intake is rice
- food security lt--gt water security
14Rice - wet or dry
- land preparation
- weed control
- water buffer
- inflow of nutrients
- nitrogen fixing organisms
- dissolving nutrients
- controlling acidification
- diseases
- fish
15Changing conditions - changing practices
- Labor requirement and direct seeding
- Land pressure and multiple cropping
- Water scarcity and water-less rice production
- Global climate change and methane emission in
rice fields
16Project approach
- Integrated analysis and design of water saving
rice ecosystems at different scales - Field - empirical research (testing management
practices) - Farm - empirical/model research (survey/farm
modelling) - Watershed - model research (hydrological
simulation model)
Field
Farm
Watershed
17Field - Design of water-use efficient rice systems
18Farm - opportunities and consequences
- Indonesia
- Water saving practices economically attractive
- Implementation difficult - infrastructure,
communication between farmers and irrigation
engineers, farmer skills, risk - India
- Farmers are testing practices
- Government supports farm trials
- Madagascar
- System of rice intensification increases yields
- Adoption limited - requires much labour at moment
that cash income is needed ? little time for
labour demanding planting - Overall opportunities
- Introduction other crops (expands windows of
opportunity) - Water for irrigating other / more land
19River basin
Implications for water availability and
alternative use
- Indonesia (Citarum basin)
- 10 change in land use ? new water reservoir
unnecessary - Water saving practices rice ? twice as much water
for Jakarta - Other options
- Expand irrigated land for food
- Allocate to nature conservation
- Allocate to industrial and household use
20Strengthen rice networks and capacity building
- International workshops and symposium
- Water Wise Rice production
- Transition in Agriculture
- Platform water-saving in rice-based cropping
systems - 7 BSc, 7 MSc and 3 PhD students received training
- 6 trainees for three months in the Netherlands
- 4 sandwich PhDs
21Follow up
- Need for innovative solutions
- Strong international ties
- Capacity building