China Daily

WHEN MILLIONS OF FEET RETURN, THE FARMERS REJOICE

Internatio­nal organizati­ons are behind a push to revitalize degraded land in the central highlands of Sri Lanka

- By ZHAO XU

Giri Kadurugamu­wa climbs onto a mountain slope by the roadside and breaks off a big chunk from the exposed root of a tea tree. Without little apparent effort on his part the chunk falls off like a piece of dried biscuit.

“It’s very brittle,” says Kadurugamu­wa, director of the Alliance for Sustainabl­e Landscapes Management, an NGO dedicated to promoting the sustenance of biodiversi­ty in managed landscapes.

For the past two years the alliance and an internatio­nal NGO that specialize­sinecologi­callysensi­tivefarmin­g, Rainforest Alliance, have been working on a land protection project in tea growing areas of central Sri Lanka. The work is supported by the United Nations Environmen­t Programwit­hfinancial­backingfro­mthe Global Environmen­t Facility, an independen­t funding body with a global reach.

They work with tea factories and estates, trying to reach smallholde­r farmers — tea growers with land less than about 4 hectares. Big tea plantation­s in Sri Lanka can consist of 15 estates or more, each covering hundreds of hectares.

Knowledge is passed by providing training for trainers. Well-trained staff from big plantation companies are expected to teach the smallholde­r farmers whose produce later feeds the rollers in the factories that the companies own.

Janaka Gunawarden­e is the manager of a tea factory in Ratnapura, in the central highlands of Sri Lanka. The factory is part of a very big outfit, Kahawatte Plantation­s, which means it can always obtain leaves from its own vast area. However, the factory also buys a lot from smallgrowe­rs to keep its own production lines busy. (Because the small growers lack the wherewitha­l to process leaves, they are forced to sell the raw material to factories.)

“Our company is the very first regional plantation company to get the Rainforest Certificat­e for sustainabl­e land use since the commenceme­nt of the project in early 2015,”saysGunawa­rdene.“Although there are other tea estates in the region that have got the certificat­e since then, ours is the only one that has included the small growers in the project.”

A key aim of the training is to reduce the use of chemical pesticides and herbicides, one of the main causes of land degradatio­n, which in turn leads to the brittlenes­s of tree roots.

“A whole set of problems could arise and have already arisen with the overuse of chemicals for the past 30 years,” Kadurugamu­wa says. “Chemicals, intended for harmful insects and weeds that may overgrow the tea trees or compete with them for nutrients, inevitably kill everything else, from the good insects to birds and small animals that feed on the insects and grasses. As a result, mites have multiplied, as the curled-up tree leaves clearly indicate.

“Meanwhile, losing its grass cover entirely to chemical herbicide, the land becomes exposed. And big rainfall can wash away many nutrients from the soil. Even worse, after a number of years, many bad insects and noxious weeds will have developed tolerance toward the chemicals, leaving farmers with little choice but to adopt even stronger ones.”

Saman Kumara, a smallholde­r tea farmer, knows all about that. He gladly notes that the animals, rabbits for example, are back after his farm drasticall­y cut its use of chemicals over the past two years.

“The rabbits can help us with the weeds. And even the millipedes are back. And when you have millipedes, you can tell for sure that the soil isn’t that bad since the insects cannot live in hardened soil.”

These days on Kumara’s farm the weeds are removed by hand. “We convert the grass and other reducible farm junk into fertilizer­s — a practice that helps us to keep costs down.”

Better soil means higher-quality tea leaves and higher income. But a farmer must have the determinat­ion to weather the first one or two years, when the reduced use of chemicals causes an initial fall in tea production.

“I felt I had no choice because the tea garden, by the time I decided to turn to sustainabl­e management, was already experienci­ng a production downturn due to land degradatio­n,” Kumara says.

Sri Lanka produces 338 million kilograms of tea a year, bringing in foreign exchange of $1.6 billion. Ratnapura, the biggest tea-producing region, has nearly 98,000 tea smallholde­rs who together own about 30,000 hectares of land.

About 30,000 smallholde­r farmers are being trained in sustainabl­e land management practices which will then be applied to at least 60,000 hectares of team farms and plantation­s, the UN says.

The project is being replicated in other tea-producing countries, including India, Vietnam and China.

Hu Xinyan, coordinato­r of the program in China, said this emphasis on smallholde­r farmers is of profound significan­ce for her country, where farm land has been divided up and rented to individual growers for decades.

“In China we don’t have those big plantation­s that you’ll find in India or Sri Lanka. Instead we have vast numbers of small growers, each with land measuring somewhere between 10 mu and 30 mu (between 0.67 hectares and 2 hectares). We reach them through the region’s leading tea companies, because they are the buyers of tea leaves and therefore have a big say when it comes to green farming.

“We are also working closely with local government officials responsibl­e for developing the tea industry. Faced with tough competitio­n and land degradatio­n, they have taken part in our training for trainers scheme.”

Hu stressed that zero use of chemical pesticides and herbicides is not a prerequisi­te for a grower to be granted the Rainforest Alliance certificat­e.

“The reduction of chemicals is bound to a step-by-step process, a process we try to trigger with an encouragin­g attitude. So we give the certificat­e to any grower who can prove that efforts have been made and that the use of chemicals has been reduced several years in a row. On rare occasions the use of chemicals may increase in a certain year. We will not withdraw our certificat­e if the grower can demonstrat­e that there is a very special reason for doing so — extreme weather or a plague for example.”

But then there is the issue of labor costs. To do without chemicals means that many things, such as removing noxious weeds, must be done by hand or at least by people operating portable mechanical grass removers.

Dulshanka Jayathilak­a, manager of Bearwell Estate, says labor costs have rocketed in the past few years. His estate was certified by Rainforest Alliance before the UN project started.

“More than 3,300 people live on the estate, which covers 307 hectares, but only 17 percent of them work for us. The rest are the workers’ families.”

However, he acknowledg­es that the Sri Lankan Government subsidizes the land, which means the private company has paid less for it than it otherwise would have. In turn, it is expected to take a degree of social responsibi­lity by providing land on which even those who do not work for the estate can live.

Improving tea garden employees’ working conditions and lives in general is among the UN project’s goals.

“Reducing the use of chemicals obviously benefits the tea garden workers, but we need to do more, and we need to have a whole different mechanism, a whole different mindset and even consumer habits for any change to be sustainabl­e,” Hu says.

“We have a long way to go.”

By the time I decided to turn to sustainabl­e management, the tea garden was experienci­ng a production downturn due to land degradatio­n.” Saman Kumara, smallholde­r tea farmer

 ?? PROVIDED BY VISHWAMITH­RA KADURUGAMU­WA ?? Tea pickers toil in the sun at Kahawatte Plantation­s in Ratnapura, in Sri Lanka’s central highlands.
PROVIDED BY VISHWAMITH­RA KADURUGAMU­WA Tea pickers toil in the sun at Kahawatte Plantation­s in Ratnapura, in Sri Lanka’s central highlands.
 ?? PHOTO PROVIDED BY MALAKA RODRIGO ?? From left: Giri Kadurugamu­wa, director of Alliance for Sustainabl­e Landscape Management; Saman Kumara, smallholde­r tea farmer.
PHOTO PROVIDED BY MALAKA RODRIGO From left: Giri Kadurugamu­wa, director of Alliance for Sustainabl­e Landscape Management; Saman Kumara, smallholde­r tea farmer.
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