June 17, 2008 / New York TIMES
Scientist at Work | Norman T. Uphoff
Food Revolution That Starts With Rice
By WILLIAM J. BROAD

ITHACA, N.Y. — Many a professor dreams of revolution. But Norman T.
Uphoff, working in a leafy corner of the Cornell University campus, is
leading an inconspicuous one centered on solving the global food
crisis. The secret, he says, is a new way of growing rice.
Rejecting old customs as well as the modern reliance on genetic
engineering, Dr. Uphoff, 67, an emeritus professor of government and
international agriculture with a trim white beard and a tidy office,
advocates a management revolt.

Harvests typically double, he says, if farmers plant early, give
seedlings more room to grow and stop flooding fields. That cuts water
and seed costs while promoting root and leaf growth.

The method, called the System of Rice Intensification, or S.R.I.,
emphasizes the quality of individual plants over the quantity. It
applies a less-is-more ethic to rice cultivation.

In a decade, it has gone from obscure theory to global trend — and
encountered fierce resistance from established rice scientists. Yet a
million rice farmers have adopted the system, Dr. Uphoff says. The
rural army, he predicts, will swell to 10 million farmers in the next
few years, increasing rice harvests, filling empty bellies and saving
untold lives…

That may sound audacious given the depths of the food crisis and the
troubles facing rice. … But Dr. Uphoff has a striking record of
accomplishment, as well as a gritty kind of farm-boy tenacity.

He and his method have flourished despite the skepticism of his
Cornell peers and the global rice establishment — especially the
International Rice Research Institute, which helped start the green
revolution of rising grain production and specializes in improving
rice genetics.

His telephone rings. It is the World Bank Institute, the educational
and training arm of the development bank. The institute is making a
DVD to spread the word….

In Tamil Nadu, a state in southern India, Veerapandi S. Arumugam, the
agriculture minister, recently hailed the system as "revolutionizing"
paddy farming while spreading to "a staggering" million acres.

Chan Sarun, Cambodia's agriculture minister, told hundreds of farmers
at an agriculture fair in April that S.R.I.'s speedy growth promises a
harvest of "white gold." …

Critics dismiss S.R.I. as an illusion.

"The claims are grossly exaggerated," said Achim Dobermann, the head
of research at the international rice institute, which is based in the
Philippines. Dr. Dobermann said fewer farmers use S.R.I. than
advertised because old practices often are counted as part of the
trend and the method itself is often watered down.

"We don't doubt that good yields can be achieved," he said, but he
called the methods too onerous for the real world.
By contrast, a former skeptic sees great potential. Vernon W. Ruttan,
an agricultural economist at the University of Minnesota and a
longtime member of the National Academy of Sciences, once worked for
the rice institute and doubted the system's prospects.

Dr. Ruttan now calls himself an enthusiastic fan, saying the method is
already reshaping the world of rice cultivation. "I doubt it will be
as great as the green revolution," he said. "But in some areas it's
already having a substantial impact." …

Dr. Uphoff oversaw field trials [in Madagascar] for three years, and
the farmers averaged eight tons per hectare. Impressed, he featured
S.R.I. on the cover of his institute's annual reports for 1996 and
1997.

Dr. Uphoff never met the priest [who introduced S.R.I.], who died in
1995. But the success prompted him to scrutinize the method and its
origins.

One clear advantage was root vigor. The priest, during a drought, had
noticed that rice plants and especially roots seemed much stronger.
That led to the goal of keeping fields damp but not flooded, which
improved soil aeration and root growth.

Moreover, wide spacing let individual plants soak up more sunlight and
send out more tillers — the shoots that branch to the side. Plants
would send out upwards of 100 tillers. And each tiller, instead of
bearing the usual 100 or so grains, would puff up with 200 to 500
grains.
One drawback was weeds. The halt to flooding let invaders take root,
and that called for more weeding. A simple solution was a rotating,
hand-pushed hoe, which also aided soil aeration and crop production.

But that meant more labor, at least at first. It seemed that as
farmers gained skill, and yields rose, the overall system became labor
saving compared with usual methods.

Dr. Uphoff knew the no-frills approach went against the culture of
modern agribusiness but decided it was too good to ignore. In 1998, he
began promoting it beyond Madagascar, traveling the world, "sticking
my neck out," as he put it.

Slowly, it caught on, but visibility brought critics. They dismissed
the claims as based on wishful thinking and poor record keeping, and
did field trials that showed results similar to conventional methods.

In 2006, three of Dr. Uphoff's colleagues at Cornell wrote a scathing
analysis based on global data. "We find no evidence," they wrote,
"that S.R.I. fundamentally changes the physiological yield potential
of rice."

While less categorical, Dr. Dobermann of the rice research institute
called the methods a step backward socially because they increased
drudgery in rice farming, especially among poor women.

In his Cornell office, Dr. Uphoff said his critics were biased and
knew little of S.R.I.'s actual workings. The method saves labor for
most farmers, including women, he said. As for the skeptics' field
trials, he said, they were marred by problems like using soils dead
from decades of harsh chemicals and monocropping, which is the growing
of the same crop on the same land year after year.

"The critics have tried to say it's all zealotry and religious
belief," Dr. Uphoff sighed. "But it's science. I find myself becoming
more and more empirical, judging things by what works."

His computer seems to hum with proof. A recent report from the
Timbuktu region of Mali, on the edge of the Sahara Desert, said
farmers had raised rice yields 34 percent, despite initial problems
with S.R.I. guideline observance.

In Laos, an agriculture official recently said S.R.I. had doubled the
size of rice crops in three provinces and would spread to the whole
country because it provided greater yields with fewer resources.

"Once we get over the mental barriers," Dr. Uphoff said, "it can go
very, very quickly because there's nothing to buy."

The opponents have agreed to conduct a global field trial that may end
the dispute, he said. The participants include the rice institute,
Cornell and Wageningen University, a Dutch institution with a stellar
reputation in agriculture.

The field trials may start in 2009 and run through 2011, Dr. Uphoff
said. "This should satisfy any scientific questions," he added. "But
my sense is that S.R.I. is moving so well and so fast that this will
be irrelevant."

Practically, he said, the method is destined to grow.

"It raises the productivity of land, labor, water and capital," he
said. "It's like playing with a stacked deck. So I know we're going to
win."

Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company

[If this method is indeed more labor-intensive, that's a good thing:
it uses more of what most poor countries have, i.e., abundant
labor-power while economizing on stuff like imported fertilizer and
pesticides. The critics seem to want to release labor-power from the
land, perhaps because that serves the needs of global capitalism? They
also don't seem concerned about the cost of imported ingredients.]

-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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