The Jerusalem Post

As climate change bites, a Tunisian farmer turns to old wheat varieties

- • By JIHED ABIDELLAOU­I

TUNIS (Reuters) – Tunisian wheat farmer Hasan Chetoui is seeking inspiratio­n from the deep past as he tries to adapt to drought caused by climate change, sowing old wheat varieties that he hopes will produce crops throughout the year.

Chetoui does not believe his experiment with alternativ­e types of wheat is likely to work everywhere, but he thinks it may help him cope after years of scant rains and heat waves that destroyed much of his crop last year.

“We obtained an old Tunisian type of wheat, cultivated in the field, capable of producing multiple times a season, providing us with strategic solutions,” he said.

Chetoui’s farm is located in the Borj Al-Amri area of northern Tunisia, a region that was a bread basket for Mediterran­ean civilizati­ons stretching back to ancient Rome and Carthage, though Tunisia is now a net wheat importer.

Years of drought affecting much of North Africa have emptied Tunisian reservoirs

and dried up crops, while a succession of scorching summers have seared some of those that remain.

Chetoui hopes that by avoiding reliance on a single summer harvest, he may be able to produce at least some wheat even in bad years. He and agricultur­al union officials said other farmers have resorted to traditiona­l seeds, but had only anecdotal accounts of their experience.

Agricultur­al experts in Tunisia are skeptical that old wheat

varieties will succeed in protecting farmers from the impact of climate change, pointing out that modern wheats produce far higher yields.

However, they also say older varieties may work better in certain areas or under specific conditions, and that Chetoui’s experiment­s are worth trying.

“We cannot determine whether they will succeed or fail because we cannot assess the effectiven­ess until it is implemente­d on a large scale,” said Mohamed Rajaibia of the

Tunisian Agricultur­al Union.

Chetoui began working on farms at the age of 12. Now 64, he still seeks seeds for old grain varieties including corn and barley as well as wheat, for use in his fields.

For years he has been sowing harvests with seeds that he says were used in his family for generation­s and were handed down to him by his father.

He has also used some old varieties from the Tunisian seed gene bank, he said, and has collected seeds from other farmers who said they were family inheritanc­es, including some that are not registered with the gene bank.

“We must rely on our original Tunisian seeds because, through experience and knowledge, these seeds hold the solution and can contribute to many strategic solutions in addressing food crises,” he said.

Not all experts disagree with this notion.

“Original seeds are rooted in nature, rooted in the quality of the soil and rooted according to the location, and they have the ability to adapt,” said Hussein al-Rhaili, an agricultur­e policy expert in Tunisia.

 ?? (Jihed Abidellaou­i/Reuters) ?? TUNISIAN WHEAT FARMER Hasan Chetoui carries a bundle of wheat last week at his farm in Manouba, Tunisia.
(Jihed Abidellaou­i/Reuters) TUNISIAN WHEAT FARMER Hasan Chetoui carries a bundle of wheat last week at his farm in Manouba, Tunisia.

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