Close Menu
Alan C. Moore
    What's Hot

    ‘Message was sent in error’: California senator rectifies Pahalgam statement, says he represents largest Hindu-American population in US

    May 15, 2025

    Social Security retirement age rises to 67 in 2025: What 1960-born Americans need to know about full benefits

    May 15, 2025

    AWFUL: Democrat Senator Refuses Help for Mom Fighting Stage-Four Cancer

    May 15, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • ‘Message was sent in error’: California senator rectifies Pahalgam statement, says he represents largest Hindu-American population in US
    • Social Security retirement age rises to 67 in 2025: What 1960-born Americans need to know about full benefits
    • AWFUL: Democrat Senator Refuses Help for Mom Fighting Stage-Four Cancer
    • ‘Habeas Corpus’ My Tush: Liberals Want Kilmar Garcia OUT of Jail and Elon Musk IN!
    • 100 Days, 142,000 Deportations
    • US retail sales little changed, signs of pullback after pre-tariff rush
    • Gift diplomacy: How Qatar bought its way into America’s power circles
    • Labour U-Turn: How UK PM Keir Starmer went hard right on immigration
    Alan C. MooreAlan C. Moore
    Subscribe
    Thursday, May 15
    • Home
    • US News
    • Politics
    • Business & Economy
    • Video
    • About Alan
    • Newsletter Sign-up
    Alan C. Moore
    Home » Blog » Salt of the earth: Pilot project helping reclaim Sri Lankan farms

    Salt of the earth: Pilot project helping reclaim Sri Lankan farms

    May 15, 2025Updated:May 15, 2025 World No Comments
    msid ,imgsize cms
    msid ,imgsize cms
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
    Salt of the earth: Pilot project helping reclaim Sri Lankan farms
    AP file photo

    Katukurunda: A commando in an elite Sri Lankan police unit, Sameera Dilshan has an unusual mission, to reclaim farms poisoned by salt, a long-standing problem now accelerating due to climate change.Increasing salinity is slowly and steadily swallowing traditional rice paddies along the island’s coastline, taking away the livelihood of generations of farmers.Two hours’ drive south of the capital Colombo lies Katukurunda, one of the camps of the formidable Special Task Force (STF), created four decades ago to fight Tamil rebels.While his colleagues train for riot control under the humid heat of the nearby Indian Ocean, the 35-year-old non-commissioned officer and his “commando-farmer” team are hoeing, weeding and watering.Their goal? To grow coconut palms and a wide variety of fruits and vegetables in a paddy declared dead 40 years ago due to salt water contamination.“This plantation was launched in 2022 as part of a government initiative to improve food security,” Dilshan said, with local authorities allocating land parcels.The method, known as sorjan, is similar to techniques used in Thailand and Indonesia.It reshapes flood-prone land by digging ponds where rice can be grown or fish raised, with more saline-tolerant coconut trees planted.Embankments around these ponds are used for more delicate crops.“We’re tending to 360 coconut trees planted here… along with pumpkins, gourds and cucumbers,” Dilshan said. “In two and a half years, we’ll know if it’s a success or not.”

    Yields under threat

    “It’s an efficient and climate-resilient production system that optimises land use and productivity, and increases farmers’ profits,” said Buddhi Marambe, from the University of Peradeniya.The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said in a 2024 report that saltwater from seas and oceans affects 10.7 percent of the Earth’s land, making it uncultivable in some cases.It travels up rivers with the tides, seeps into soil through evaporation, and contaminates groundwater used for irrigation.Climate change, which dries out the soil, reduces water resources, or raises sea levels, is expected to increase the proportion of such “salty” land from 24 percent to 32 percent of the world’s surface area by the end of the century, the FAO predicts.These trends “threaten agricultural productivity and reduce crop yields in affected zones”, it warns.Sri Lanka is no exception.Marambe estimates that 223,000 hectares (551,000 acres), half of which are rice paddies, are impacted by salinity — nearly eight percent of the country’s total arable land.

    Seeping salt

    South of the pilot plantation lies the village of Parappuwa, surrounded by abandoned land.Here, just a few kilometres from the sea, only a few small areas of the paddy fields are still in use.“Everything is polluted by salt that comes up during high tide,” said Gamini Piyal Wijesinghe, 46, a farmer’s son who, after he left the army, went into the restaurant business instead.He pointed to a stream where 18 small dams were built to stop the seawater.“They weren’t constructed properly,” he said. “The water seeps through.”Other former rice farmers have turned to cinnamon or rubber cultivation.“Cinnamon is doing fairly well, but our income has significantly dropped since we stopped growing rice,” said W.D. Jayaratne, 50, head of the local farmers’ association.The future is gloomy.“Salinity in the water is increasing and threatening our farmland,” he added. “There are also insects. Everywhere you look, there are problems.”In this district of Kalutara, local authorities are offering abandoned land to farmers to bring it back under cultivation, mostly with coconut trees.“We’ve already allocated 400 hectares and plan to increase that to 1,000 in the next two years,” said district chief Janaka Gunawardana.“There’s high demand for coconut. It will create income for our people.”

    Resistant varieties

    In Katukurunda, Aruna Priyankara Perera, 55, was encouraged by the success of the STF farming experiment.“I got five acres (two hectares) next to my hotel to replicate the STF’s project,” he said in front of his freshly planted coconut and pumpkin field.“The land is free for two years, provided you can show it’s being cultivated.”Rice, the local staple, is a top concern for the authorities.“Soil salinity is a major issue in Sri Lanka,” Marambe said. “We’ve successfully tested several promising rice varieties that are resistant to salinity and flooding.”The stakes are high.A recent study of the Bentota river estuary, in the island’s southwest, found that half of local rice farmers had lost all their income due to saltwater contamination.Even more serious, Sri Lanka’s food security is now under threat. The last rice harvest, from September to March, was the country’s lowest since 2019.“If we don’t all roll up our sleeves to bring salt-polluted land back into cultivation and production,” Marambe said, “the future will only get darker.”

    Source credit

    Keep Reading

    Social Security retirement age rises to 67 in 2025: What 1960-born Americans need to know about full benefits

    ‘Message was sent in error’: California senator rectifies Pahalgam statement, says he represents largest Hindu-American population in US

    Gift diplomacy: How Qatar bought its way into America’s power circles

    US retail sales little changed, signs of pullback after pre-tariff rush

    China first-quarter emissions fell despite rising power demand

    Canada reduces income tax in first cabinet meeting of Carney government. How will it benefit Indians there?

    Editors Picks

    ‘Message was sent in error’: California senator rectifies Pahalgam statement, says he represents largest Hindu-American population in US

    May 15, 2025

    Social Security retirement age rises to 67 in 2025: What 1960-born Americans need to know about full benefits

    May 15, 2025

    AWFUL: Democrat Senator Refuses Help for Mom Fighting Stage-Four Cancer

    May 15, 2025

    ‘Habeas Corpus’ My Tush: Liberals Want Kilmar Garcia OUT of Jail and Elon Musk IN!

    May 15, 2025

    100 Days, 142,000 Deportations

    May 15, 2025

    US retail sales little changed, signs of pullback after pre-tariff rush

    May 15, 2025

    Gift diplomacy: How Qatar bought its way into America’s power circles

    May 15, 2025

    Labour U-Turn: How UK PM Keir Starmer went hard right on immigration

    May 15, 2025

    Canada reduces income tax in first cabinet meeting of Carney government. How will it benefit Indians there?

    May 15, 2025

    China first-quarter emissions fell despite rising power demand

    May 15, 2025
    • Home
    • US News
    • Politics
    • Business & Economy
    • About Alan
    • Contact

    Sign up for the Conservative Insider Newsletter.

    Get the latest conservative news from alancmoore.com [aweber listid="5891409" formid="902172699" formtype="webform"]
    Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube Instagram TikTok
    © 2025 alancmoore.com
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Accessibility

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.