These new
varieties perform well in both swampy and irrigated ecologies with a yield
potential of 8–9.5 metric tonnes per hectare, which has about 2–18% yield advantage
over the current varieties.
All six
varieties are tolerant to the rice yellow mottle virus disease and iron
toxicity as well as other environmental stresses, including unfavourable
climatic conditions.
The research
activities test for drought tolerance, salinity tolerance and many of the
things that climate change brings in crop production.
“These are
very good times for farmers,” says Dr. Maxwell Asante, a rice breeder and senior
research scientist. “We are expecting that if farmers adopt these varieties,
production levels will increase and with the seriousness government is attaching
to agriculture now, with the Planting for Food and Jobs [programme] where they are
giving them fertilizers, loans and other things, the full potentials of these
varieties will be expressed on the field”.
Rice is a
major food security crop in Ghana. The CSIR-CRI has over the years released
eight varieties, whilst the Savanna Agricultural Research Institute (CSIR-SARI)
has developed six rice varieties.
The twenty
varieties of domestic rice developed by the research institutions should give
Ghanaian farmers the edge to increase production for national rice
self-sufficiency.
But the
country’s rice import bill keep rising, currently hovering close to $600million
per annum.
Director of
CSIR-CRI, Dr. Stella Ennin, is hoping for a shift in taste because the new domestic
rice varieties are within the consumer-preferred perfumed class, which is
driving the importation of the grain food.
The new Ghanaian
grain type is similar to the conventional US long grains, such as Texas Star or
Jasmine type of rice. Two of the lines also have starch pasting properties that
make them suitable for processing into other products such as breakfast cereals
and canned soup.
“We also
have the production technology that goes with these crops to ensure that we are
able to manage these crops within the environment to achieve their full
potential,” she noted.
Ghanaian rice
breeders say they are producing varieties that are comparable to the imported brands,
but their efforts will only become fruitful when the rice value chain works without
any break – from extension services to farming as a business and consumption
patterns.
According to
Dr. Asante, a sustained interest of government to support agricultural
production, coupled with dedicated research activities will help reverse rice
importation and drive self-sufficiency within the next five to ten years.
By Kofi Adu
Domfeh
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