Crops that sow seeds of thirst!

epa04521738 An Indian man walks in a mustard field on the outskirts of Guwahati city, India, 09 December 2014. Assam Government has taken up an initiative to attract the farmers of Assam state towards traditional mustard cultivation to meet the increasing demand of mustard oil.  EPA/STR

 

Bloomberg

Jaiveer Arya wipes sweat from his brow as he squats in the shade and watches workers weigh his wheat crop at a grain market in India’s northern Haryana state. He’s hoping for a good price from exporters.
Unseen in Arya’s 850 kilograms of wheat is about 128 kilograms of water that’s embedded within the food. Arya and millions of farmers like him in India account for about 2.5 percent of global agriculture exports, meaning that a large amount of water embedded in produce is shipped overseas and lost for good by a nation still emerging from one of its worst droughts in decades.
“We export agriculture products without any thought,” said Prashant Goswami, director and climate scientist at CSIR-National Institute of Science, Technology and Development Studies in New Delhi. “When water is embedded in a product that’s exported, it’s lost forever. That’s a bigger danger for our water.”
Goswami estimates India could exhaust available water supplies in less than 1,000 years because of net exports of food such as rice and wheat. He argues officials must change farming policies to turn the deficit in trade in embedded water into a surplus. Growing demand from industry and the nation’s 1.3 billion people is also adding pressure for better management of the resource.

RICE SALES
India — the world’s top rice exporter — shipped agricultural commodities worth more than 2.6 trillion rupees ($39 billion) overseas in 2013-2014, government data show. The nation exported about 25 cubic kilometers of water embedded in its agricultural exports in 2010. That’s enough water to meet the needs of nearly 13 million people.
Hundreds of millions of people in India grappled this year with one of the country’s worst droughts in decades, following two years of poor rainfall and the onset of intense summer heat. The June-September monsoon is bringing some relief, but a longer-term challenge looms from competition for supplies.
Arya, 44, grows both rice and wheat in his 10-acre smallholding near the border of Haryana and Uttar Pradesh states. Another common crop in the region is water-intensive sugar cane.
Speaking at the market in May, Arya said he draws water from a 170-foot well for irrigation, five times deeper than when his father tilled the farm. He added that he’s had to bore deeper three times in the last five years.

UNSEEN DEPLETION
Policies that effectively provide farmers with free water as well as free electricity to run pumps are stoking over-exploitation, according to Ashok Gulati, an agriculture economist and former chief of India’s Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices. “Who has seen the future?” he asked. “Farmers can’t see how much water’s being depleted underground.”
India is one of the world’s biggest users of groundwater, and the World Resources Institute estimates more than half of the nation faces high water stress. A 2009 study by the University of California, Irvine, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration showed groundwater depletion in northwestern India from 2002 to 2008 was equivalent to a net loss triple the capacity of Lake Mead, the largest man-made reservoir in the U.S.

IMPORT FLOOD?
One possible policy step for Asia’s No. 3 economy is to curb sugar cane subsidies and abolish levies on imports of the sweetener, to encourage farmers to grow crops that need less water, Gulati said.
“Let imports flood the market,” he said. India could learn from China, according to Goswami, who’s published his work on embedded water in the journal Nature along with co-author Shiv Narayan Nishad, a mathematician at the M.S. Ramaiah University of Applied Sciences in Bengaluru.
China imports more water-intensive produce while exporting food that uses less water, their research shows. “Policy makers need to sit down and ensure that we import food in such a way that we bring in more water,” Goswami said. “The world is no longer innocent of this virtual water trade.”

epa05035464 An Indian labourer harvests paddy in a paddy field at village Verka on the outskirts of Amritsar, India, 21 November 2015. Paddy is the main summer-sown crop in India, the world's second biggest producer of rice. Indian state of Punjab is a major contributor to the India's food grain pool with wheat and rice forming a major chunk of the contribution.  EPA/RAMINDER PAL SINGH

epa05394033 Indian women carries paddy seedlings at Samirpur village in Kangra, India, 27 June 2016. Paddy is the main summer-sown crop in India, one of the world's biggest producer of rice.  EPA/SANJAY BAID

epaselect epa05187254 Picture made available on 29 February 2016 shows Tiwa tribal women carrying harvested Broom sticks (Thysanolaena maxima) for drying in Karbi Anglong district of Assam state, India on 28 February 2016. Broom grass has emerged as the most widely cultivated crop in the hills of Karbi Anglong district of Assam state and The harvesting season for broom grass starts from first week of February and it continues till the end of March.  EPA/STR

epa04769990 An Indian villager carries their harvested paddy in bullock cart in Morigaon district of Assam state, India, 27 May 2015. The initiatives taken by the India's Central and the State Governments of the region have already resulted in an increase in production of food grains with the area now turning into a food surplus zone from a food deficit one.  EPA/STR

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend