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Rural farmers turn to technology to manage climate change

Published:Wednesday | September 4, 2019 | 12:11 AM
Richard Gayle of Flagaman, St Elizabeth, use water that was purchased to wet this roots of the melon vine so to fight the drought in this 2014 Gleaner photo.
Richard Gayle of Flagaman, St Elizabeth, use water that was purchased to wet this roots of the melon vine so to fight the drought in this 2014 Gleaner photo.

KINGSTON (CMC):

Small farmers in Jamaica are turning to technology to mitigate the impact of climate change on their livelihoods.

With the country now in the grip of a prolonged drought, over the past few months, farmers have also been struggling with record temperatures and increased bush fires.

In that regard, the Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA) has partnered with the Rural Agricultural Development Authority (RADA) and the Met Service to train farmers in adopting climate-smart agricultural practices.

It is part of the CTA’s ‘Accelerating the Uptake of Climate Smart Agriculture’ initiative to help increase climate-smart practices among 50,000 smallholder farmers across Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific.

Over the past week, the Met Service has been training small farmers in the parish of St Mary to use weather advisory services via their mobile phones to prepare for droughts and possible floods.

“The idea behind the Met Service working with RADA and the farmers is to provide the information way ahead of time. We know that there are more intense hurricanes, more major flooding, (and) extreme heat,” said Glenroy Brown, climate specialist at the Met Service.

“This was one of the hottest summers we have ever seen in Jamaica with temperatures at a record high, 102°F or 39°C,” he added.

The Met Service will now customise the regular daily weather forecasts to suit the needs of farmers in various parishes.

“Climate services provide drought information not just at what is happening right now but it can provide information even three months and six months in advance. So farmers, if you have the information coming into your phone three months and six months in advance, try to use that information to make better farming. We can forecast how much rainfall is expected in St Mary three months in advance,” Brown told farmers at the latest training session.

They have also introduced a number of other programmes, including community forecasting and a climate-smart early-warning system.

“We have introduced a second climate-smart early-warning system. So we have a system now that can tell you where the drought is, how long the drought will last, it will tell you where the flash flood is, how long the flash flood will last. It will tell you if Jamaica is under a hurricane warning or a flash flood warning. And all of that information can be on your mobile phone,” he told farmers, adding, “Right now in Jamaica, we have over 100 automatic weather stations and over 200 manual rain gauges across the island.”

Brown reminded the farmers of the likely impacts of the changing weather patterns, namely dry rivers and reservoirs, water and food shortages, and an increase in bush fires.

He said that in St Mary alone, there were over 300 bush fires in two months. In July, the fire department recorded over 140 bush fires.

The Met Service is currently working on a new tool that is expected to be introduced in January that will be able to forecast bush fires.

“We’re looking at the vegetation, providing that this is not something that is set by individuals. But what we’re trying to do is work with the fire department, and the fire department will go into these communities if we say that they are likely to experience outbreaks of bush fires (and) to tell these communities do not light any fires,’ Browne said, adding “the environment right now is too perfect for bush fires”.

Other initiatives have also been developed to assist farmers adapt to changing weather patterns.

“We have tools like the Agro Met Bulletin, it would tell you the farmers and extension officers what happened over the last three months [and] what is expected over the next three months. Our rainfall summary, we look at each month, how much rainfall and compare that to what we normally get over a 30 year period,” he noted.

Brown said that the initiative also provides for farmers who do not have access to the Internet, and they have therefore entered into an arrangement with the mobile service providers on the island to provide text messages free of charge to the farmers.

He hailed the drought forecasting tool as one of Jamaica’s success stories, as it has been adopted by other countries in the Caribbean and Central America.

“This is a success story. Little Jamaica developed a drought tool five years ago and this drought tool is now a book called Resilience: the Science of Adaptation to Climate Change. And now this drought tool is what we’re using to forecast what the drought will be for the next three months.

“Countries right across the Caribbean now, including Barbados and the Caribbean Institute of Meteorology and Hydrology are using this tool to inform farmers not just in Jamaica but right across the region. So over 40 million users in the Caribbean and Central America now use this tool that was developed with our farmers here in Jamaica to forecast drought way in advance,” he said, noting that the data has shown the drought forecasting tool is effective.

“In 2014-2015, Jamaica experienced one of the worst droughts in history and we introduced this tool to our farmers … and nationally agricultural production went down by 30 per cent.

“But … what we did was to sample 500 farmers and look at farmers who were exposed to training like this, that they were getting the messages on their phone, they were at training sessions like this so they had access to climate smart information.

“We found that farmers who had no information lost about 72 per cent of their production compared to farmers who had access to this information [who lost] only 39 per cent. But it was in a year when Jamaica was seeing a decline in agriculture by 30 per cent.”

Farmer Joan Johnson has been growing multiple crops including plantain, bananas and cocoa. She told the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC) she welcomed the training, as she has been affected by drought and bush fires.

“Normally this time of year we get a lot of rain, but we might not get it this trip so I don’t know,” she said, adding “I live off my farm. I supply the cocoa and the plantain and I don’t have any right now. They called me yesterday and I said I don’t have any.”

But she remains optimistic. “It’s rough but by the help of the Almighty I’ll get through it.”