“In This Age Of The Internet & Climate Change, What Can IRRI Learn About Global Agriculture? Asking For A Friend!” – Frank A Hilario
I personally know IRRI has the “Riceworld Museum & Learning Center” because my son Paul Benjamin was once its Curator; years earlier, I had graduated from the University of the Philippines Los Baños in whose campus IRRI is located.
I was UPLB Freshman when IRRI was Rice Freshman in 1960 when
it was established. I have been in and out of the campus since then, and as a
writer & editor, today I want to know about IRRI’s scientific contributions
to the rice world in the field of climate change.
Today, IRRI tells me in its website (IRRI, irri.org):
Climate Change &
Sustainability
Rice production is
both a victim and a contributor to climate change…
At IRRI we develop and
adapt climate-responsive solutions, working with extension agents, national
research institutions, and governments across South Asia, Southeast Asia, and
Africa, to promote sustainable rice-based food systems.
First, we help rice
farmers adjust to climate change. By leveraging the genetic diversity of the
Rice Genebank, the world’s largest repository of rice varieties, we breed rice
varieties that can survive unforeseen climate shocks and thrive in marginal
environments. We also boost the mitigation of future climate crises by
developing new cultivation practices and technologies that minimize greenhouse
gas emissions, enhance input-use efficiency, and predict and respond to future
climate threats. Finally, we work with governments to provide an evidence base
so they can make informed decisions and set policies to meet their development
agenda and their SDG contributions. (End of IRRI info sharing in this
regard)
IRRI works institutionally “to promote sustainable
rice-based food systems” – and thus, it works to breed rice varieties that can “survive
unforeseen climate shocks and thrive in marginal environments.”
Good!
“[IRRI also boosts] the mitigation of future climate crises
by developing new cultivation practices and technologies that minimize
greenhouse gas emissions, enhance input-use efficiency, and predict and respond
to future climate threats.”
Also Good!
But Not Good: IRRI
mentions its research works on generating “cultivation practices and
technologies that minimize greenhouse gas emissions” – but it omits mention of how
many/much greenhouse gases (GHGs) are generated by rice chemical agriculture.
Why? IRRI cannot mention what it does not work on, is why. And
why not? Good question!
IRRI is 62 years old and should have realized at least in
2007 when Al Gore began pounding
on our heads the threat of global warming brought about by climate change
brought about by, among others, chemical agriculture.
IRRI’s work is “to promote sustainable rice-based food
systems” – I say that that is quite inadequate! It should be “to
promote regenerative rice-based food systems,” such as via organic
farming. However, IRRI hardly talks about organic agriculture, and I found one reason
why: “Study: Modern Rice Varieties May Not Be Suited For Organic Agriculture” (Rice Today, ricetoday.irri.org/).
If IRRI
wants to be relevant in these climate-change times, it must breed rices suited to
put a stop to GHGs from chemically enriched ricefields. Otherwise, IRRI’s
research is all gas!@517
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