In the last 5 years, the
Cereal Systems Initiative for South Asia (CSISA) project has scaled out water-
and labor-saving technologies. These technologies have reached over 25,000
farmers and have covered more than 70,000 acres in Thanjavur, Thiruvarur, and
Nagapattinam districts of the Cauvery Delta and the neighboring districts of
Ramanathapuram and Sivagangai. This is one of the impacts reported during the CSISA Tamil Nadu HubCelebration Workshop.
CSISA tested and then rolled out laser
land leveling, improved and mechanized dry direct seeding of rice, mechanical
transplanting of rice under both puddled and nonpuddled conditions,
site-specific nutrient management, alternate wetting and drying, and line
sowing using a multicrop seeder under reduced-tillage conditions. The technologies
are now helping farmers in Tamil Nadu reduce the cost of production and thus
increase their income.
“Farmers can
save water by 25–35% by not puddling the field and by using shorter-duration crops,”
said R. Ganeshamoorthy , hub manager of the CSISA
project in Tamil Nadu. “Farmers can save about 40% of labor because renting a
farm machine is cheaper than hiring manual labor. The profit from the dry
direct seeded rice is twice as much as that of conventional rice cultivation. Most of all, farmers can increase their yields
by 7–10 % depending on the rice variety.”
CSISA also introduced
laser land leveling technology in the Cauvery Delta to improve the efficiency of crop
production. Farmers has widely accepted the laser land leveling technology because
of leveling precision, uniform crop maturity, and water savings by 30–40 %, and
increased input-use efficiency.
“Farmers in Tamil Nadu can save some costs
from the machine transplanted rice in nonpuddled
condition compared with puddled
transplanted rice,” said Ganeshamoorthy. “In fact, farmers can save as much as
48% of the labor cost from land preparation, 50% for irrigation, and 67% from
the cost of seed and sowing.” Through this technology, farmers can save around USD100
or about 20 % of the overall production cost per hectare, according to him.
“Working together with several important organizations
is key to the success of the widespread of these technologies in Tamil Nadu,”
said Noel Magor, head of the Impact Acceleration Unit and Training at IRRI. “In 2013, for example, the use of seed drill
and land laser leveling machines was endorsed by the Tamil Nadu Agricultural
University (TNAU) while the Department of Agriculture (DoA) facilitated and
provided some subsidy to purchase the machines for outscaling to the farmers.”
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The Tamil Nadu Rice Research Institute, the National
Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development, the ITC Agribusiness division,
Syngenta, MS Swaminathan Research Foundation, and the Reliance Foundation also supported
the research, capacity-building, and extension work toward large-scale
adoption of the technologies. These partner organizations share CSISA’s goal of
increasing the food and income security of resource-poor farm families in South
Asia through the development and deployment of new varieties, sustainable
management technologies, and through policies and partnerships. The project has been promoting durable
change at scale in South Asia’s cereal-based cropping systems for several years
now. It operates through rural “innovation hubs” in Bangladesh, India, and
Nepal, and complements regional and national efforts.
The project in Tamil Nadu is jointly implemented
by IRRI, the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT), the
International Food Policy Research Institute, and the International Livestock
Research Institute. It is funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and
the United States Agency for International Development.
The CSISA
Tamil Nadu Hub Celebration Workshop
was held on 15-16 September in Thanjavur.
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