The Star Malaysia

Greener way to grow rice

A giant drone and unorthodox irrigation help farmers cut emissions

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There is one thing that distinguis­hes 60-year-old Vo Van Van’s rice fields from a mosaic of thousands of other emerald fields across Long An province in southern Vietnam’s Mekong Delta: It isn’t entirely flooded.

That and the giant drone, its wingspan similar to that of an eagle, chuffing high above as it rains organic fertiliser onto the knee-high rice seedlings billowing below.

Using less water and using a drone to fertilise are new techniques that Van is trying and Vietnam hopes they will help solve a paradox at the heart of growing rice: the finicky crop isn’t just vulnerable to climate change but also contribute­s uniquely to it.

rice must be grown separately from other crops and seedlings have to be individual­ly planted in flooded fields; backbreaki­ng, dirty work requiring a lot of labour and water that generates a lot of methane, a potent planetwarm­ing gas that can trap more than 80 times more heat in the atmosphere in the short term than carbon dioxide.

It’s a problem unique to growing rice, as inundated fields stop oxygen from entering the soil, creating the conditions for methane-producing bacteria.

rice paddies contribute 8% of all human-made methane in the atmosphere, according to a 2023 Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on report.

Vietnam is the world’s thirdlarge­st rice exporter and the staple importance to Vietnamese culture is palpable in the Mekong Delta.

The fertile patchwork of green fields crisscross­ed by silvery waterways has helped stave off famine since the Vietnam War ended in 1975. rice isn’t just the mainstay of most meals, it is considered a gift from the gods and continues to be venerated.

It is moulded into noodles and sheets and fermented into wine.

In busy markets, motorcycli­sts lug 10kg bags to their homes.

Barges haul mountains of the grain up and down the Mekong river. rice kernels are then dried and hulled by machines before they’re packed for sale in factories, lined from floor to ceiling with sacks of rice.

Van has been working with one of Vietnam’s largest rice exporters, the Loc Troi Group, for the past two years and is using a different method of irrigation known as alternate wetting and drying, or AWD. This requires less water than traditiona­l farming since his padi fields aren’t continuous­ly submerged.

They also produce less methane. Using the drone to fertilise the crops saves on labour costs.

With climate shocks pushing a migration to cities, Van said that it’s harder to find people to work the farms. It also ensures precise amounts of fertiliser­s are applied.

Too much fertiliser causes the soil to release earth-warming nitrogen gases.

Once crops are harvested, Van no longer burns the rice stubble – a major cause of air pollution in Vietnam and its neighbours, as well as Thailand and India.

Instead, it’s collected by the Loc Troi Group for sale to other companies that use it as livestock feed and for growing straw mushrooms, a popular ingredient.

Van benefits in various ways. his costs are down while his farm yield is the same. Using organic fertiliser enables him to sell to european markets where customers are willing to pay a premium for organic rice.

Best of all, he has time to tend to his own garden.

“I am growing jackfruit and coconut,” he said.

Loc Troi Group CEO Nguyen Duy Thuan said that those methods enable farmers to use 40% less rice seed and 30% less water. Costs for pesticides, fertiliser and labour also are lower.

Thuan said Loc Troi – which exports to more than 40 countries including in europe, Africa, the United States and Japan – is working with farmers to expand acreage using its methods from the current 100ha to 300,000ha.

That’s a long way from Vietnam’s own target of growing “high quality, low emission rice” on one million hectares of farmland, an area more than six times the size of London, by 2030.

Vietnamese officials estimate that would reduce production costs by a fifth and increase farmers’ profits by more than Us$600mil (rm2.86bil), according to the state media outlet Vietnam News.

Vietnam recognised early on that it had to reconfigur­e its rice sector. It was the largest rice exporter, ahead of both India and Thailand, to sign a 2021 pledge to reduce methane emissions at the annual United Nations climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland.

each year, the industry suffers losses of over Us$400mil (rm1.91bil), according to recent research by Vietnam’s Water resources Science Institute.

This is worrying, not just for the country but for the world.

The Mekong Delta, where 90% of Vietnam’s exported rice is farmed, is one of the world’s regions most vulnerable to climate change.

A UN climate change report in 2022 warned of heavier flooding in the wet season and droughts in the dry season.

Scores of dams built upstream in China and Laos have reduced the river’s flow and the amount of sediment that it carries downriver to the sea.

The sea level is rising and turning the river’s lower reaches salty and unsustaina­ble levels of groundwate­r pumping and sand mining for constructi­on have added to the problems.

Changing centuries-old forms of rice farming is expensive and even though methane is a more potent cause of global warming than carbon dioxide, it only receives 2% of climate financing, Ajay Banga, the World Bank’s president, told the UN climate summit in Dubai last year.

Combating methane emissions is the “one rare, clear area” where low-cost, effective and replicable solutions exist, Banga said.

The World Bank is supporting Vietnam’s efforts and has begun helping the Indonesian government to expand climate resilient farming as a part of more than a dozen projects to reduce methane worldwide.

The hope is that more countries will follow, though there is no “one-size-fits-all”, said Lewis h. Ziska, a professor of environmen­tal health sciences at Columbia University.

“The one commonalit­y is that water is needed,” he said, adding that different methods of planting and irrigation can help manage water better.

Growing more geneticall­y diverse rice varieties would also help because some are more resilient to excess heat or require less water, while others might even emit less methane, he said.

Nguyen Van Nhut, director of the rice export company hoang Minh Nhat, said its suppliers are using varieties of rice that can thrive even when the water is briny and the heat is extreme.

Now, the business is adapting to the unseasonal rains that make it harder to dry the rice, adding to risks from mould or insect damage.

Typically, rice is dried in the sun immediatel­y after harvest, but Nhut said his company has drying facilities in their packaging factory and also will install machinery to dry the grains closer to the fields.

“We don’t know which month is the rainy season, like we did before,” he said. — AP

 ?? ?? Fuelling up: a worker loading fertiliser into a tank on a large drone to spray it over Van’s rice fields in Long an province. — ap
Fuelling up: a worker loading fertiliser into a tank on a large drone to spray it over Van’s rice fields in Long an province. — ap
 ?? ?? Big business: Two employees working in a warehouse packed with bags of rice at a rice export company in Can Tho. — ap
Big business: Two employees working in a warehouse packed with bags of rice at a rice export company in Can Tho. — ap
 ?? ?? Taking to the sky: a large drone carrying fertiliser flies over Van’s rice fields in Long an province. — ap
Taking to the sky: a large drone carrying fertiliser flies over Van’s rice fields in Long an province. — ap

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