SA: Cellphone helps reduce irrigation costs


  1. Fidelis Zvomuya, AfricaNews reporter in Pretoria, South Africa, photo: Martha Piqueras
    Small scale sugar cane farmers in South Africa have managed to potentially reduce their direct irrigation costs by US$300 per hectare thanks to the use of a high cellphone technology system that is providing them with practical, real up to date information about when to irrigate their crops.
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    A pilot project was implemented by the South African Sugar Association on two small scale irrigation schemes at Pongola in Mpumalanga province and Makhathini in KwaZulu Natal, meant at boasting production as well as saving water a precious commodity in these dry regions.

    In Pongola 47 farmers with a total 508 hectares were put under the pilot programme.

    The system called My Canesim employs automatic weather stations, the internet and cellular technology that uses a newly formulated concept, dynamic depletion level to manage irrigation on large fields allowing spatial and temporal extrapolation of point simulations to other parts of the field and to future days within an irrigation cycle.

    According to Dr Abraham Singles a principal agronomist with the South African Sugar Research Institute who developed the system, the benefits they have identified from the farmers who are under the pilot projects are a saving in irrigation water of up to 33%, reduction in deep drainage of water from the root zone of 64%, an increase in efficiency of irrigation water use of 48% and a potential reduction in direct irrigation costs of US$300 per hectare.

    Dr Singles said My Canesim estimates the recent, current and future water balance, crop status and yield from field information and real time weather date and then automatically generates and distributes simple irrigation advice by SMS to farmers’ cellular phones.

    Themba Mthembu who was the first farmer to receive the advice from the system said My Canesim is a welcome development that is empowering smallholder farmers technically and well as business skills.

    Mthembu who farms a 15 hectare plot said they receive text messages every Wednesday telling them whether they should irrigate that week based on accurate weather information from the area.

    “SMSs are sent to us whenever an action is required, the content comprises a suggestion to start, stop or continue irrigation for our fields with an estimate of current and final cane yield.

    “We receive these SMSs in our mother language making it is easy for us to implement. We also receive faxes on our cellphones as weekly summary advises containing information such as current and future can yield, sucrose content and soil water deficit which can be downloaded from the website from your phone,” he said.

    Another farmer Thandi Simelani said the project was implemented in 2004, using semi-permanent and portable overhead (sprinkler) irrigation, with an average irrigation interval of between seven and 10 days. A participatory approach was adopted to ensure relevance and practicality.

    Farmers, extension staff and mill cane supply management contributed to the design of the web interface, the advice and the reports generated by the system. Simelani said she did not know that over irrigating her sugar cane could lead to reduced yield before the system was introduced.

    “If this system is introduced to all sugar cane farmers in the country’s 14 sugar cane growing areas, then our production level will increase as we will be saving a lot of water that can in turn be utilised by other new entrants,” she said.

    South Africa’s sugar cane growing areas accounts for 412 000 hectares of which the majority of farmers are small scale black farmers, without access to the latest equipment and the best technology. The farmers also receive text messages on the latest crop prices, market reports, which in turn empower them to negotiate the best price for their produce.

    The system also serves as a useful benchmark tool for the farmers’ field crop status and is used by extension and technical staff as a basis for discussion with growers during field visits and also to identify agronomic practices that limit yields such as poor crop stand, insufficient weed control, erratic movement of sprinklers and excessive sprinklers setting times

    But Dr Singles said one concern about the systems is its reliance on the feed back from farmers.

    “Although we believe that the advice generated from estimated irrigation amounts is of value, it could be advantageous to obtain actual irrigation amounts applied in practice to ensure that simulations of water status are more accurate, hence the need to explore various technology options to address this concern,” he said.

    Keywords: agriculture telecom ict south_africa society




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