Agriculture uses 70% of the world’s freshwater supplies
For centuries, farmers have found ingenious ways of making the best of the water available, but access to fresh water is becoming more and more unpredictable. Extreme weather events and drought is as much of a threat, as flash flooding in farms and food producers. In some countries, entire communities are beginning to migrate in search of a steady water supply for their crops.
Can we rethink how we use the water available to us for the protection and betterment of our farms as well as the climate?
Solutions in India
To grow at least one kilogram of rice, it takes 5,000 litres of water. Paddy cultivation accounts for more than a third of the water used in agriculture. But the problem isn’t the amount of water this crop uses, but the bacteria that lives in the flooded soil. The soil constantly produces methane, a massive greenhouse gas. In fact, 20% of all methane on the planet comes from paddy fields, and rice is the number one crop for greenhouse gas emissions.
Southern India, which is suffering from acute water shortages, due to the changing monsoon rains, has started subsidising drip irrigation for rice farmers.
Saravanakumar Mani, region manager at Netafim India South, said, “Right now, 54% of the Indian regions are having high water stress. At the same time, we need to produce food for the increasing population. So, we need to adopt modern technology. We need to give the water to the plant, not to the soil.”
Farmer, Ravichandran Vanchinathan, is using the method called the System of Rice Intensification (SRI), which not only uses less fresh water, but also improves yield.
“Many farmers, because of water scarcity, have given up rice cultivation, thinking it’s a water guzzler. But, it is not so, it’s a myth. In SRI, we don’t irrigate the field as often, only as and when it’s needed. We call it alternating wetting and drying method and we use 30-40% less water,” he says.
Ravichandran pumps freshwater into the field intermittently, rather than continuously flooding them like paddies. Rotating wet and dry periods, also results in the roots getting more oxygen, which helps them thrive. And, planting young, single rice seedlings wider apart, means extra space for canopy and root growth, producing bigger and healthier plants.
Remarkably, the SRI method appears to be producing more rice even though it uses fewer plants and less water. If paddy field alternatives like SRI or drip irrigation were rolled out across the globe, we could save more water and reduce greenhouse gases in large proportions.
Solutions in the USA
Regularly faced with either drought or deluge, many farmers around the world rely on groundwater as a dependable source for irrigating their crops. However, our growing population means that demand is outstripping supply.
But could there be a way for farmers to recharge these vital water resources and prevent the world’s wells from running dry?
In California’s Central Valley, a region that produces a quarter of the USA’s food and relies mostly on water pumped from underground, to irrigate the crops, is fast running out of its water supply.
Rising temperatures have caused the snowpack on the California mountains to melting sooner and cause floods each year. Some farmers in the region are trying to turn what would normally be a problem into a solution, using the melted snow to top up the natural underground aquifers.
Don Cameron, vice-president and general manager at Terranova Ranch Inc, said, “I’ve been farming here for about forty years and have seen our ground water level drop about one foot per year. We realised we needed to take action to mitigate the problem. We take water that normally flows by our ranch, that’s flood water, that causes problems downstream with flooding and eventually ends up in the ocean and is lost to agriculture, and we divert it and bring it onto our farmland.” A multi-million pound infrastructure has been constructed to divert the floodwater to where it can then be soaked through the soil to the aquifers below.
“We know that in our general regions here, we can store up to two million acre-feet of water, which is twice as large as the largest dam in our region. The potential is really huge.”
Don’s pioneering work has proved inspirational. Replenishing groundwater supplies is now a focus for farmers not just in California, but around the world – where new projects are underway to capture excess water in times of flood and monsoon so it can be drawn on when drought hits.
Solutions in South Africa
In Southern Africa, Jill Farrant - professor of molecular and cell biology at the University of Cape Town, is trying to harness the power of the so-called ‘resurrection plants’ – species that can lose 95% of their water and remain in a dry state for years, but when it rains, spring back to life.
Jill said, “Climate change is for real, and we should all be very aware of that. It’s going to bring different issues to different countries. In South Africa – in my country – what the greatest prediction is, that in twenty years’ time, we will be a desert. That’s a big problem because there’s very little irrigation and we rely entirely on rainfall.”
“My work is to be able to understand how these plants can lose water and not die, and to transfer that genetic and bio-chemical potential to crops so that they too can lose water and not die,” he added.
Jill and her team at the University of Cape Town have discovered that food crops also have the same potential, because they share the same core genes, which allows them, as seeds, to lie dormant until watered.
“Now that we understand that every crop has these genes in the genome, a gene editing technique is going to be used to switch them on, in leaves and root, under drought conditions, when normally those genes would be silent. Wheat, rice and maize are up there as providing 75% of all food calories for everyone in the world and, sadly, all of those crops have been bred for food yield, compromising their stress ability. Because of our study on resurrection plants, what we’re going to do with gene editing is to try and mimic that in a crop. If we don’t make changes now, we’re not going to be ok in 20 years’ time,” Jill explains.
Whether we create more plants that need less water like Jill and her team, or plants that drink salt water or focus on simply managing what we have available, there is no getting away from the necessity of this essential ingredient in all our food production.
In episode four of the BBC World News and bbc.com series, Follow the Food: It Never Rains, It Pours, renowned botanist, James Wong, investigates how farmers, scientists and engineers are attempting to completely change the way agriculture interacts with water - the way it’s used, sourced and stored.
Follow the Food is an eight part multi-platform series which examines where our food comes from and how this might change in the near future with new technologies and innovative ways of farming. It airs at 01:30 and 15:30 GMT on Saturdays and 09:30 and 20:30 GMT on Sundays on BBC World News. Audiences can also visit www.bbc.com/followthefood for special features, and @BBCFuture for the latest from the series.