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IRRI presents climate-smart solutions for rice research
Thursday, 2017/10/12 | 08:06:20

IRRI, Wednesday, October 11, 2017

Figure: Matty Demont, Senior Scientist and Market Research - the Philippine-France Forum on Agriculture


Climate change poses a risk to the agricultural sector, threatening food security and farmers well-being.  Against this backdrop, the Philippine-France Forum on Agriculture provided a venue for sharing of scientific and environmentally efficient strategies to address the effects of climate change.

The International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) presented its projects that benefit rice farmers and consumers.  Matty Demont, Senior Scientist and Market Research team lead, shared the research on upgrading rice value chain in the country.

“Rice breeders need to tailor rice varieties to both market trends and the climate change. We also need to help rice farmers become more climate-resilient and competitive,” Demont said.

IRRI has developed and released climate-smart rice varieties that are drought-, flood-, and salt-tolerant to help farmers and communities cope with the adverse effects of climate change. Relevant and timely information on rice production is also important to boost productivity. IRRI works on widening farmers’ access to useful data through the Philippine Rice Information System (PRISM) project.

PRISM uses remote sensing, geographic information systems (GIS), crop modeling, smart phone-based surveys, and cloud computing to generate information on where, when, and how much rice is grown in the country and assess crop health and damages caused by flood and drought. IRRI’s scientist Alice Laborte and the project leader noted that involving the right partners is very crucial to this initiative’s success.

The forum on agriculture is part of the celebration of the 70th anniversary of France and Philippines diplomatic relations. IRRI’s participation is part of its commitment to share expertise to achieve food and nutrition security, improve the quality of life in rice-related communities, and protect the rice-growing environment for future generations.

 

See http://news.irri.org/2017/10/irri-presents-climate-smart-solutions.html

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