This
is just the BEGINNING of the failure of world food production caused
by rapid climate change
Drought
drives 42 percent crash in crop production in Sri Lanka
20
October, 2014
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - An 11-month drought, considered by experts to be the worst in recent history, has forced sharp increases in food prices in Sri Lanka – and the worst may be yet to come, according to recent updates.
Rice,
the island’s staple food, has seen double digit price hikes in all
varieties compared to a year ago. Some of the more popular varieties
such as Samba have recorded price increases of 30 percent compared to
a year back, according to government
statistics.
Rice
prices rose 36 percent by the end of September, compared to a year
ago, as a result of falling production, the Geneva based Assessment
Capacities Project, which provides updates of humanitarian crisis
situations, said in its latest Global
Food Security Updates,
citing government reports.
Some
vegetable varieties have shown similar price increases, with beans
and beetroot rising in cost by 19 percent and 13 percent respectively
compared to a year ago.
“This
is one of the worst droughts in the past decade. The impact is going
to be severe and will increase if adequate rains are not received
during the October (and) November season,” said Ranjith
Punyawardena, chief climatologist at the Department of Agriculture.
According
to government estimates, the rice harvest this year is likely to be
at least 20 percent below the four million metric tons recorded last
year and will also be the lowest in six years. Overall, crop
production has fallen by 42 percent this year compared to 2013, the
update by the Assessment Capacities Project said.
FACING
TWIN EVILS
Dayarathna
Gamage is a farmer from the North Eastern Polonnaruwa district who is
now faced with the twin evils of losing his harvest and facing rising
food prices.
Gamage,
who has a one acre plot of paddy rice and a half acre plot of
vegetables, has lost two harvests back to back. “I am in debt. I
have borrowed over Rs 250,000 ($1,800) this year and mortgaged my
paddy land,” he said.
In
a normal year, the father of two school-going children makes around
Rs 500,000 ($3,600) to Rs 600,000 ($4,200) from his crops. But
he said that all his savings had been exhausted and he was now left
to wait till the next rains.
“If
they don’t come, I will lose my paddy plot,” he said.
Over
1.6 million people are affected by the drought and at least half of
that population is in the Northern and Eastern Provinces of the
country, two of the poorest regions nationally, according
to government
figures.
A
study by the World Food Programme in April said that over 700,000 Sri
Lankans, mostly from the North and East, were food insecure. The
agency has set aside $2.5 million to assist the drought victims,
while the government has also allocated around $10 million to provide
cash-for-work programmes.
Farmers
like Gamage blame their losses on lack of advice about upcoming rain
delays, but Punyawardena and other experts say the losses are also
due to poor water and crop management.
“It
is now more about how we manage our water than the amount of rain we
get,” said D.C.S. Elakanda, project director for the Climate
Resilience Improvement Project at the Ministry of Irrigation and
Water Management.
Though
rains have failed in the last 11 months, Elakanda said that during
the season preceding that rains had been above average. To balance
increasingly extreme rainfall and worsening drought, “we need to
manage our water resources much more efficiently”, he said.
Punyawardena
said that when the drought set in, the advice sent to farmers by the
Department of Agriculture was to shift to quicker maturing rice
varieties or to crops like onions and bananas that require less
water.
But
“very few heeded our advice”, he said.
However,
farmers are slowly coming around to breaking out of their traditional
harvesting patterns and becoming more flexible, the climatologist
said.
“They
have suffered such high losses due to changing weather patterns that
they have no option but to be flexible,” he said.
Amantha
Perera is a freelance writer based in Sri
Lanka. He can be followed on Twitter at @AmanthaP
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