The Prague Post - Less-thirsty rice offers hope in drought-stricken Chile

EUR -
AED 4.182698
AFN 80.566372
ALL 98.778769
AMD 442.542585
ANG 2.052372
AOA 1044.811036
ARS 1341.492305
AUD 1.774319
AWG 2.052611
AZN 1.938585
BAM 1.953841
BBD 2.289454
BDT 137.771833
BGN 1.954877
BHD 0.429231
BIF 3372.299565
BMD 1.138758
BND 1.489854
BOB 7.852125
BRL 6.439338
BSD 1.133938
BTN 96.369392
BWP 15.54407
BYN 3.710813
BYR 22319.656278
BZD 2.277666
CAD 1.578933
CDF 3278.483887
CHF 0.937084
CLF 0.028013
CLP 1074.976368
CNY 8.307257
CNH 8.28115
COP 4802.142374
CRC 573.304912
CUC 1.138758
CUP 30.177086
CVE 110.151147
CZK 24.930811
DJF 201.923064
DKK 7.464671
DOP 66.82064
DZD 150.860409
EGP 57.889785
ERN 17.08137
ETB 151.779054
FJD 2.568923
FKP 0.855309
GBP 0.849303
GEL 3.120175
GGP 0.855309
GHS 16.441511
GIP 0.855309
GMD 80.852031
GNF 9820.806039
GTQ 8.732974
GYD 237.232087
HKD 8.83375
HNL 29.395488
HRK 7.535045
HTG 148.365997
HUF 404.112165
IDR 19112.572197
ILS 4.116837
IMP 0.855309
INR 97.047797
IQD 1485.410326
IRR 47955.946694
ISK 146.125452
JEP 0.855309
JMD 179.625915
JOD 0.807497
JPY 162.238286
KES 146.615525
KGS 99.584109
KHR 4539.288235
KMF 492.510319
KPW 1024.882176
KRW 1638.035265
KWD 0.348904
KYD 0.945052
KZT 581.526804
LAK 24525.972879
LBP 101597.926085
LKR 339.603457
LRD 226.775603
LSL 21.170697
LTL 3.362456
LVL 0.688823
LYD 6.203642
MAD 10.513856
MDL 19.424179
MGA 5042.831984
MKD 61.535968
MMK 2391.254212
MNT 4066.388471
MOP 9.059315
MRU 44.878416
MUR 51.461459
MVR 17.548352
MWK 1965.785416
MXN 22.332057
MYR 4.92797
MZN 72.880916
NAD 21.170697
NGN 1823.732485
NIO 41.726688
NOK 11.815041
NPR 154.189951
NZD 1.91177
OMR 0.438422
PAB 1.133963
PEN 4.161327
PGK 4.695126
PHP 64.109229
PKR 318.626064
PLN 4.267079
PYG 9079.69491
QAR 4.133028
RON 4.977964
RSD 117.092571
RUB 94.10804
RWF 1599.560732
SAR 4.272103
SBD 9.51354
SCR 16.202249
SDG 683.815688
SEK 10.96385
SGD 1.490424
SHP 0.894885
SLE 25.851296
SLL 23879.166831
SOS 648.035877
SRD 41.963108
STD 23569.990905
SVC 9.922049
SYP 14806.046792
SZL 21.16431
THB 38.011177
TJS 11.962535
TMT 3.985653
TND 3.381805
TOP 2.667079
TRY 43.784086
TTD 7.696147
TWD 36.736904
TZS 3054.72012
UAH 47.270956
UGX 4158.829233
USD 1.138758
UYU 47.740655
UZS 14692.265562
VES 98.555984
VND 29584.932148
VUV 137.313911
WST 3.147508
XAF 655.285448
XAG 0.034551
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.07755
XDR 0.814965
XOF 655.285448
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.106767
ZAR 21.129409
ZMK 10250.18461
ZMW 31.664549
ZWL 366.679603
  • RBGPF

    60.8800

    60.88

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.32

    -0.04%

  • VOD

    0.2200

    9.57

    +2.3%

  • SCS

    -0.0300

    9.86

    -0.3%

  • RELX

    -0.1900

    53.36

    -0.36%

  • GSK

    0.6300

    38.06

    +1.66%

  • NGG

    0.8100

    72.85

    +1.11%

  • BCC

    -0.1800

    95.33

    -0.19%

  • RIO

    0.3100

    60.87

    +0.51%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    10.12

    -0.59%

  • BTI

    0.3400

    42.39

    +0.8%

  • BCE

    0.1600

    21.81

    +0.73%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    12.8

    +0.47%

  • AZN

    0.3600

    69.93

    +0.51%

  • BP

    -0.0600

    29.13

    -0.21%

  • CMSD

    0.0200

    22.48

    +0.09%

Less-thirsty rice offers hope in drought-stricken Chile
Less-thirsty rice offers hope in drought-stricken Chile / Photo: RAUL BRAVO - AFP

Less-thirsty rice offers hope in drought-stricken Chile

A cold, dry part of Chile might not sound like the best place to grow rice, a famously thirsty grain that thrives in tropical conditions.

Text size:

But a new strain of the world's favorite cereal developed by scientists in the drought-plagued South American country has generated hope that rice can be grown in seemingly inhospitable conditions.

Using an innovative planting technique, Javier Munoz has been trialling the "Jaspe" strain created by experts at the Agricultural Research Institute's (INIA) Rice Breeding Program.

It is one of several research efforts worldwide to come up with less resource-hungry crops at a time of increased water scarcity in parts of the world due to global warming.

Using Jaspe in combination with a growing method that requires only intermittent watering cut the Munoz family's water consumption in half in a country that has for generations cultivated rice in flooded fields, or paddies.

At the same time, yield rocketed, with each seed yielding about thirty plants -- nearly ten times more than a conventional rice field.

Irrigating rather than flooding rice fields "is a historic step... towards the future," Munoz, 25, told AFP at his farm in the region of Nuble, a nearly five-hour drive south from the capital Santiago.

Next year, he said, he hoped to increase his production area from one hectare to five.

Chile's Maule and Nuble regions contain the southernmost rice fields in the world.

Typically grown in wetter, tropical areas, rice cultivation in Chile has been hampered by an unprecedented megadrought, now in its 15th year and driven by climate change, according to scientists.

Each Chilean eats on average 10 kilograms (22 pounds) of rice per year -- nearly half of which is grown domestically and 80 percent of that in flooded fields, according to the SRI-Rice research center at Cornell University.

The flooding method, which requires about 2,500 liters (660 gallons) of water per kilogram (2.2 pounds) of rice, is used around the world to combat weeds and regulate the temperature around vulnerable seedlings.

- Less methane -

The Jaspe rice strain was obtained by INIA agricultural engineer Karla Cordero and colleagues by crossing a Chilean seed with a Russian one better adapted to cold and dry climates.

The modified seed is then grown using the SRI growing technique developed in Madagascar in the 1980s that involves spacing the seedlings further apart in enriched soil, and watering only sporadically to build a more resilient root system.

Cordero presented the results of nearly 20 years of experimentation -- conducted with backing from the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA) -- at an International Rice Research Conference in Manila in 2023.

The findings have yet to be published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal, but Chile's Agriculture and Livestock Service, an arm of the agriculture ministry, gave the green light in 2023 for the new strain of long-grain white rice to be rolled out commercially.

Apart from using less water and fewer seeds, the new Jaspe-SRI method also emits less methane, a potent planet-warming gas more famously produced by cows.

Rice cultivation in flooded paddies crawling with microorganisms is responsible for about 10 percent of human-caused methane emissions, according to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization.

- 'Climate-smart' -

Jaspe has proven to be more resistant to storms, floods and heatwaves. "The plants are much more robust, which allows rice to be produced without flooding," Cordero said.

Makiko Taguchi, a rice cultivation expert at the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), told AFP the Chilean work amounted to "a promising approach to improving rice production while reducing the environmental impact."

Pointing to similar work being done in Japan, she said: "Obtaining resistant varieties is one of the main ways to increase resilience to climate change."

Cordero said the results suggested the approach could also work in other parts of the world "where large quantities of rice are produced and where there are droughts."

The team hopes to test Jaspe soon in Brazil -- the largest rice producer in the region -- and in other South American countries.

"This is the future," said Munoz. "If we want... food security and care about the environment, this is the way."

K.Pokorny--TPP