Crop diversification vital to ensure water security in Barind area

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
WhatsApp

Instead of depending on only Boro rice,

large-scale promotion of diversified crops farming can be the crucial means

of ensuring water security in the drought-prone Barind area.

The area consisting of partial parts of Rajshahi, Naogaon and Chapainawabganj

districts is drought-prone due to its geographic location but the farmers

used to cultivate diversified crops to cope with the water-stressed condition

since the immemorial time.

Experts and development workers unanimously viewed that the grassroots

farmers also meet up their water demands from the natural water bodies like

rivers, canals and ponds.

Niamul Bari, professor of Department of Civil Engineering in Rajshahi

University of Engineering and Technology (RUET), said the natural surface

water resources are facing an endangered condition at present due to

multifarious reasons including prolonged rainless situation.

In this situation, farmers have become dependent on groundwater for

irrigating the farming fields, especially the Irri-Boro paddy which is the

highly irrigation-consumed crop.

Prof Bari, however, opined that water is being adjudged as one of the vital

sources in the transformation process of development of the present barind

area besides making it green during the last couple of decades.

Lifting of underground water must be reduced to the minimum as the future of

agriculture depends on availability of water amid a formidable threat of

climate change when there is an alternative to keeping food production rate

increasing.

He said there should be nature-based solutions for water challenges in the

region. Emphasis should be laid on the need for integrated solutions in water

development plans considering political, social and local realities.

Apart from this, emphasis should be given to the cultivation of drought-

tolerant crops instead of depending on only Irri-Boro farming in the area to

lessen the gradually mounting pressure on underground water.

Large-scale promotion of less-water consuming indigenous crops could be the

effective means of mitigating water-stress conditions in the drought-prone

Barind area.

Narrating the sufferings caused by the abnormal lowering of groundwater

National Agriculture Award Winning Farmer Nur Muhammad mentioned that there

are enormous scopes of increasing the acreage of various low-water consuming

crops like wheat, maize, lentil, burley, sesame and chickpea in the Barind

tract.

He mentioned that the ongoing climate change at alarming rates has severely

affected indigenous crops farming and its diversity creating a real threat to

food production.

There is no alternative to encourage the farmers to promote various cereal

crops and vegetables instead of only Irri-Boro paddy on the dried land to

face the water stress condition as its groundwater table has gradually been

declining.

Muhammad said legitimate rights of the farmers and others concerned should be

protected for encouraging them towards boosting agricultural productions to

meet up its gradually mounting demands.

Shahidul Islam, coordinator (Barind Region) of Bangladesh Resource Centre for

Indigenous Knowledge (BARCIK), said utmost emphasis should be given on

practicing sustainable agriculture to attain the sustainable development

besides achieving the sustainable development goals (SDGs).

Simultaneously, species of diversified crops needs to be protected which is

the precondition to sustainable development.

Ensuring water security is very important to ensure food security and

biodiversity and sustainable culture.

Existing adverse impacts of climate change and other natural catastrophes are

posing a serious threat to biodiversity, health security and water security

in the Barind area.

Meanwhile, more than 12.58 lakh community people of 2.66 lakh households are

being motivated and encouraged towards promotion of less-water consuming

crops to reduce the pressure on underground water under the ‘Integrated Water

Resource Management (IWRM)’ project.

The project is being implemented by DASCOH Foundation in around 1,280

drought-hit villages under 39 union parishads and three municipalities of

eight upazilas in Rajshahi, Naogaon and Chapainawabganj districts supported

by Switzerland since 2014, said Akramul Haque, chief executive officer of

DASCOH Foundation.

The existing adverse impact of climate change is putting local people into

trouble since the hand-driven tube-wells are not functioning here in the dry

season, he added.

Source: Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha