Rice researchers reaping a harvest of constraints
BY AFREEHA Jawad
Rice - Lanka’s staple food
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REGRETFULLY, researchers continue to remain in the backwoods and the
shoddy treatment meted out to them needs arresting.
This writer's first hand experience at the Rice Research and
Development Institute in Bathalagoda, Sri Lanka's prime research station
pertaining to this country's staple food, revealed the trying conditions
under which these researchers work, from the institutional head down to
the clerical staff.
Executive Director Dr. Sumith Abeysiriwardena sits in a small
rectangular room hardly enough even to stretch his legs. Any visitor
seated opposite him must surely be mindful of not making him the
recipient of a kick or two.
Both visitor and he therefore share mutual caution in leg-stretching
lest one accidentally kicks the other from under the table while
engrossed in conversation.
A tour of this 128 acre sprawling premises on which sits 50 acres
experimental paddy - the rest being highland - brought me to the staff
canteen which I understood to be the locality for what is called 'taking
meals by turn'.
As I excused myself into this small, dingy, stuffy enclosure there
were around 50 staffers - some preparing to eat, earnestly looking for a
'good soul' to vacate and others that hurriedly went through their
morsel to make way for hungry colleagues.
Noted as we are in importing vehicles for politicos' travelling
comfort, which according to them is "in the people's service," this
writer wondered why higher authorities got their wires crossed in need
prioritization - significantly of political extravaganza over facilities
for researchers with better remuneration and all.
I saw some of Sri Lanka's finest researchers silently getting about
their work in ill spaced yet neatly laid out laboratories that was
anything but international standards.
In a country where the annual rice production cost is Rupees 50
billion, only 15 million is spent on research and development - all this
is minus researchers' salaries.
According to the institute's chief Dr. Sumith Abeysiriwardena and his
deputy Dr. Nimal Dissanayake - two energetic, hardworking men - at least
if Rs. 50 million is given for research, exciting results could be got
considering Bathalagoda's performance upto now - a little over five
decades.
"We do not want a red cent into our hands. What we ask is the
infrastructure, equipment and chemicals. Our experimental fields lack
maintenance. We also need improved irrigational canals," they informed.
Bathalagoda is not without its fine intellectual capital but of what
use is all that knowledge when one cannot realize still better results,
thought this writer.
This status quo even brought to Dr. Abeysiriwardena's mind that well
known Sinhala saying, "Aliya Innawa Henduwa Nehe". Making matters worse
is all the red tape of financial and administrative constraints in
getting what the institute needs.
Elaborating on the need for more and more research and its importance
which in public eye is 'wasteful', Dr. Dissanayake informed of how
research success is always not assured - something like 50-50.
There is both success and failure but still it has got to be done for
crop development, high yields, plant growth and so on. For instance, he
pointed out the paddy plants' nursery period of 14 days prior to
planting proper.
"But if I decide otherwise like shifting it off the nursery after 30
days to see what kind of results I would get - this then has to be
researched. May be it will succeed, perhaps not but still it has got to
be done. It may sound silly but that's what research is all about for
crop development," said Dr. Dissanayake signalling the importance of
funds for research work.
Bathalagoda also needs funds for its upkeep as well. Certainly,
maintaining 128 acres is no joke what, with those long and winding
canals that meander through unending stretches of greenery - all of
which are experimental fields where I saw researchers standing knee deep
in mud exposed to Wayamba's ferocious heat working alongside
agricultural labourers farmers and other para agro personnel.
This is certainly a place of scenic elegance and is sure to please
and attract any tranquil and serene thirsty visitor. A well maintained
circuit bungalow - abode to many international researchers as well -
seemingly a facade to all of the institute's already stated numerous
ills.
According to these two men Sri Lanka's rice yields have now hit an
all time high record level of 80 bushels per acre - a distant laugh from
the 13 bushels that was per acre - a six fold increase of 600 per cent
starting 1940s.
The main contributor to this rise was this institute's technological
innovation at which point brought to these staff officers' minds the
contributions of the institution's staff along with past notables that
sat amidst the greenery of Bathalagoda namely - Dr. Hector Weeraratne,
Dr. D. Senadeera, Dr. M. C. A. Sandanayake, Dr. M. P. Dhanapala, Dr.
Paul E. Peiris and Dr. Vignarajah.
Dr. Abeysiriwardena also recalled the 1940s decade bearing a six
million population when rice imports were 60 percent. After several
years in 2000 there were no imports at all despite a 19 million
population.
Strikingly, rice production figures have kept abreast of population
growth. Over the years thus we see rice production having had a ten fold
increase over a three fold population rise - indeed an unparallelled
achievement on the institution's part over 50 years that has kept Sri
Lanka's teeming millions well fed.
All other factors apart, the giant technological strides on the part
of Bathalagoda, justifies its claims to a production increase in rice.
This may not have been so if not for its dedicated staff.
The institution has every moral right to be a major stakeholder inSri
Lanka's present self-sufficiency in rice even surpassing Burma,
Philippines and Indonesia - all of which were once rice exporters now
become importers.
Drs. Dissanayake and Abeysiriwardena believe time has now come to
think of nutritional quality as a follow up to bumper yields.
This then is where the State's concern should come in to fund the
much needed research that these experts have in mind.
Despite hurdles and all other constraints if Bathalagoda could come
this far one could imagine what its achievements would be given its
growth essentials. |