ALEPPO,
Syria: A low-cost technology developed by scientists at ICARDA to
treat high level of magnesium in soil by using calcium has demonstrated
the potential to double the crop yield in magnesium-rich soils in
Central Asia.
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| Mr
Jolaman Dozbayev, 57-year old cotton farmer of Stariy Ikan village
in South Kazakhstan Province in Kazakhstan, admiringly looks
at his bumper cotton crop |
In southern Kazakhstan alone, more than
150,000 hectares of land is affected by high levels of magnesium,
which causes soil degradation and seriously reduces crop yield.
Scientists have established that addition of adequate quantities of
phosphogypsum (PG), a low-cost source of calcium, in the soil mitigates
the effect of excess magnesium and increases crop yield. On-farm trials
of the new technology conducted by ICARDA and NARS in Arya Turkestan
area of Kazakhstan produced remarkable results.
The PG technology has the potential to increase cotton yield to 3
t/ha, while the farmers usually got 1 to 1.5 t/ha without such intervention.
The increase in the yield prompted farmers to voluntarily adopt the
technology, bearing 30 percent of the cost for transportation and
application of PG, a byproduct of phosphorus fertilizer industry easily
available in Central Asia.
"I never dreamt of such a bumper crop from this problem soil.
Normally, we get only 1-2 tons of cotton per hectare, but now with
this simple technology, I can reap an extra ton this year," says
34-year-old, Abdurashid Koshkarov, a farmer from Stariy Ikan village,
130 km northeast of Shymkent, capital of South Kazakhstan Province.
He is one of the 19 progressive growers who voluntarily used PG to
improve land productivity in this region, where high magnesium content
in the soil crippled crop productivity.
The farm productivity and the profitability have gone up significantly.
"I spend about US$ 400 to raise a hectare of irrigated cotton
crop in our traditional way, and with PG application it rose to about
US$ 540. The returns also increased correspondingly. At the current
price of cotton at US$ 475 per ton, the gross income goes up to US$
1650 per hectare. It meant that with an additional investment of US$
140, we could get about an extra ton of cotton worth US$ 475 from
every hectare," explained Mr Koshkarov.
Research on the PG technology started in 2001 as part of the Phase
1 and 2 of the ADB-funded Soil and Water project implemented by ICARDA
in Central Asia. The technology was out-scaled in 2006 under another
ADB-funded project, jointly implemented by ICARDA, IWMI and ICBA,
to an area of over 100 ha, says Dr Manzoor Qadir, ICARDA-based Marginal-Water
Management Scientist of ICARDA/IWMI, who heads the initiative to out-scale
this technology in this region. The Kazakh National Water Management
Institute implemented the PG trials in the study area.
More and more farmers in the region are aware of the new technology
and are convinced that the yields soared with the application of PG.
There is an increased demand for PG in the region, and farmers firmly
believe that a "silent green revolution is in store for them".
Mr Jolaman Dozbayev, a 57-year old cotton farmer in the same village,
said: "Until last season, we were in a bad situation. But PG
application changed it altogether. The high returns from cotton ushered
in a new wave of prosperity in our lives," he said with a sense
of pride.
"Our studies showed that the PG dose per hectare should be based
on some simple soil tests, and it works out very economical for the
farmers. It is enough if the farmers apply PG once every four to five
years," says Dr Qadir.
For more information: Dr Manzoor Qadir (m.qadir@cgiar.org)
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