System of Rice Intensification


The System of Rice Intensification is a farming methodology aimed at increasing the yield of rice produced in farming. It is a low-water, labor-intensive method that uses younger seedlings singly spaced and typically hand weeded with special tools. It was developed in 1983 by the French Jesuit Father Henri de Laulanié in Madagascar. The system was not fully tested and spread throughout the rice growing regions of the world until some years later, with the help of Cornell University and others.

History and main ideas

The practices that culminated in SRI began in the 1960s based on Fr. de Laulanie's observations. Principles included applying a minimum quantity of water and the individual transplanting of very young seedlings in a square pattern.
SRI concepts and practices have continued to evolve as they are being adapted to rain-fed environments and with transplanting being sometimes replaced by direct-seeding. The central principles of SRI according to Cornell researchers are:
The spread of SRI from Madagascar has been credited to Norman Uphoff, former director of the at Cornell from 1990 to 2005. In 1993, Uphoff met officials from Association Tefy Saina, an NGO set up in Madagascar in 1990 by de Laulanie to promote SRI. He observed SRI for three years and witnessed Malagasy farmers who previously averaged two tons harvest per hectare, averaged eight tons per hectare with SRI. Uphoff was persuaded of the merits of SRI, and in 1997 started to promote SRI in Asia. Uphoff estimates that by 2013 the number of smallholder farmers using SRI had grown to between four to five million. The rapid spread of SRI around the globe, and especially in India, can be partially attributed to the smart communication strategies by its proponents in which several newspapers in India disproportionately provided coverage on SRI and effective coalition building among several national and international organisations.

Evaluation

Proponents and critics of SRI debate the claimed benefits and many questions about it remain unresolved. Wageningen University has published an article discussing the challenges of evaluating SRI in which a concluding sentence reads, "Although the technical aspects of SRI have been contested, it clearly exists as a real social phenomenon."
A review of the literature led researchers at Cornell to conclude that SRI, on average, increased yields 20 to 200%, improved resistance to environmental stresses, and increased carbon sink activity while reducing emissions, making it a triple-win for agriculture, climate security, and food security.

Successes

Proponents of SRI claim its use increases yield, saves water, reduces production costs, and increases income and that benefits have been achieved in 40 countries. Uphoff published an article in the International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability stating that SRI "can raise irrigated rice yields to about double the present world average without relying on external inputs, also offering environmental and equity benefits."
There is some evidence from northern Thailand that SRI has achieved some success there.
A special issue on SRI in the non-scientific journal Paddy and Water Environment collected recent findings in support of SRI.
In 2011 five farmers reported that they had beaten rice yield records; the best was a farmer named Sumant Kumar, who reported setting a new world record in rice production of 22.4 tons per hectare using SRI, beating the existing world record held by the Chinese scientist Yuan Longping by three tons. In 2014 S. Sethumadhavan of Alanganallur, India reported a record yield of nearly 24 tonnes of paddy rice per hectare using SRI. These reported records were not obtained under audited supervision nor under standard methods for measuring yields. They were not subjected to peer review, being reported only in the popular press, and are suspected to be physically impossible in the localities where they were obtained.

Criticism

Critics of SRI suggest that claims of yield increase in SRI are due to unscientific evaluations. They object that there is a lack of detail on the methodology used in trials and a lack of corroborating evidence in the peer-reviewed literature. Some critics suggested that SRI success was unique to soil conditions in Madagascar. Despite these claims, as of 2020 over 1,200 articles and communications about SRI in various countries had been published in scientific journals.

Gallery

SRI farming in Chhattisgarh, India: