Friday heralded the beginning of the Maha season according to the agrarian calendar; but a majority of the farmers across the country were not in their paddy fields sowing seeds but were on the streets demanding organic fertiliser which the Government has promised to deliver. While farmers holding placards and banners were protesting against the [...]

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Maha season begins; but farmers are not in the field

As farmers protest demanding fertiliser, Govt. appoints green task force to promote eco-friendly agriculture economy
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Friday heralded the beginning of the Maha season according to the agrarian calendar; but a majority of the farmers across the country were not in their paddy fields sowing seeds but were on the streets demanding organic fertiliser which the Government has promised to deliver.

While farmers holding placards and banners were protesting against the import ban on chemical fertiliser and the non-availability of organic fertiliser, tense situations were reported in many districts when the authorities tried to open the sluice gates of irrigation systems, a practice done ahead of the start of the seasonal farming.

Charging that the authorities did not understand the needs of the farmer, All-Island Farmers Federation (AIFF) Secretary T B Sarath told the Sunday Times that the Government had failed the farmers by not only taking an arbitrary and hasty decision to ban the import of chemical fertiliser, but also by not providing adequate organic fertiliser for the Maha season.

Kilinochchi farmers staging a march to the regional agriculture office, demanding fertiliser

What the farmers urgently need is nitrogen-based fertiliser to start planting, he said. Instead, the Government has imported potassium chloride fertiliser or Bandi pohora calling it organic fertiliser, while going ahead with plans to distribute it among farmers though this particular type of fertiliser is used just a few weeks ahead of harvesting, Mr Sarath said.

He also echoed the main worry among farmers: a significant reduction of yield due to lack of minerals in the soil as it has been subjected to heavy use of chemical fertiliser for decades.

In Kaudulla, farmer association leader K Asoka Karunaratne said farmers had decided not to cultivate, although the irrigation authorities were releasing water to the fields.

“What is the use of cultivation with water alone? The crops will grow strong only if proper fertiliser is applied at the proper time,” he said.

The crisis is not restricted to fertiliser alone; the import ban on agrochemicals has also led to a shortage of pesticides and weedicides which are important during cultivation. Officials, however, claim that adequate stocks of locally produced and imported pesticides and weedicides are available in the market.

But farmer leader Karunaratne said prices had shot up beyond their reach and, in some instances, three times the prices that were during the last season. He said he wondered whether the Government was in cahoots with big agrochemical companies and allowing them to make huge profits.

On Friday, the Farmer Federation at Iranaimadu in Kilinochchi held a protest march and staged a demonstration in front of the Regional Agrarian Services Department, demanding fertiliser to begin cultivation.

In the Kilinochchi District, cultivation has begun only in 40 percent of the district’s 71,000 acres of paddy lands.

The federation’s secretary, Muththu Sivamohan, told the Sunday Times many farmers were forced to postpone cultivation due to the unavailability of both organic and chemical fertiliser. He also pointed out that most farmers had little or no knowledge about the use of organic fertiliser in cultivation.

He said most organic fertilisers were of poor quality with more soil than minerals in them and, if used, they largely help weeds to grow freely, adding to the farmers’ woes.

Prof Gamini Senanayake, Chairman of the Sri Lanka Council for Agricultural Research Policy that comes under the Ministry of Mahaweli, Agriculture, Irrigation and Rural Development, said the Government should have implemented the switch to organic fertiliser in stages, expanding up to three years, rather than imposing it on farmers all of a sudden following an overnight decision.

“The farmers’ concerns over organic fertiliser and worries about a drop in the harvest are legitimate. The Government should have educated farmers through awareness campaigns before implementing the organic fertiliser policy,” Prof Senanayake noted.

He said farmers were well aware of the harmful effects of chemical fertiliser, and the Government should have prepared the farmers for the change by pointing them out.

He added that organic fertiliser was not new to Sri Lanka. Prior to the use of chemical fertiliser in the 1960s, Lankan farmers engaged in sustainable farming methods, maintaining the richness of the soil.

The Agriculture Ministry has said the process to distribute what it calls organic fertiliser has begun, and stocks have been dispatched to Agrarian Development Centres in the Ampara, Batticaloa, Anuradhapura, Polonnaruwa, Kurunegala, Puttalam, Trincomalee, and Hambantota Districts.

It said a stock of 30,000 metric tonnes of ‘organic fertiliser’ imported from Lithuania had arrived at the Colombo Port on Tuesday. Since farmers in the Ampara District had already begun cultivation, a section of the stocks had been sent there.

This week, Agriculture Minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage, at the centre of the farmers’ fury, reiterated that the Government would take urgent steps to resolve the crisis and provide relief if the farmers experienced any reduction in their yields due to organic farming.

On Friday, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa appointed another 12-member Task Force for Green Agriculture, with the aim of developing the agriculture economy by adopting eco-friendly organic farming initiatives such as manufacturing toxin-free agrarian products.

The task force, appointed in keeping up with the President’s election manifesto titled “Vistas of Prosperity and splendour”, is required to formulate “a systematic programme for sustainable maintenance of green agriculture by creating opportunities for local and international consumers to obtain toxin-free agricultural products within the next decade.”

Identifying the organic fertiliser required for various crops, improving the quality of such fertiliser production, and producing pesticides and weedicides locally, are among the key tasks vested with the task force.

If there is a shortfall in meeting the requirements through local production, the task force is instructed to identify methodologies and monitoring mechanisms for importing a limited amount of fertiliser of high standard with the approval of the Sri Lanka Standards Institute.

The task force is chaired by Vijith Welikala, Chairman of Wild Holidays (Pvt) Ltd, while the President’s Additional Secretary Vernon Perera will serve as its secretary.

Other members of the task force are: Lalith Senevirathna, S K B Kasun Tharaka Amal, Biogenic Green Technology Research Institute; Malinda Senevirathna, Director, Hector Kobbekaduwa Agrarian Research and Training Institute; R B Rasika Thusitha Kumara, Climate Smart Agriculture Co-ordinator, Vavuniya and Mannar Districts (Eco Friendly Farming Training Consultant); Dr B K J Kavantissa, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of “Siyapatha” International Education and Training Institute (Pvt) Ltd; Samantha Fernando, Kangara Holdings (Pvt) Ltd; Samuditha Kumarasinghe, Lanka Bio fertilizers (Pvt) Ltd; Ajith Randunu, Esquire Green Force Agriculture (Pvt) Ltd; N M Khalid, Lanka Nature Power (Pvt) Ltd; Shammi Kirinde, Bio Foods (Pvt) Ltd; Nirmala Karewgoda, Hysoung ONB (Pvt) Ltd; Chaminda Hettikankanamge, R K G Bio Green Farm; and Nishan de Silva, Lorance’s Liquid Fertilizer.

The task force is instructed to submit a monthly report and liaise with other task forces such as the Economic Revival and Poverty Alleviation Task Force and the Presidential Task Force for the creation of a Green Sri Lanka with sustainable Solutions for Climate Changes.

According to a gazette notification issued by Presidential Secretary P B Jayasundera, state employees are required to comply with instructions issued by the task force. If there are any deliberate delays caused by an employee or a state institution in carrying out the task force’s instructions, the task force is required to inform the Presidential Secretariat.

Tests reaffirm harmful bacteria in samplesThe National Plant Quarantine Service (NPQS) has reaffirmed that harmful microorganisms — Erwinia and Bacillus – were present in organic fertiliser samples from a China-based company, after its preliminary findings were questioned by the Chinese authorities.

NPQS Additional Director Dr W A R T Wickramaarachchi told the Sunday Times comprehensive laboratory studies the NPQS carried out reconfirmed the preliminary findings.

Earlier samples were subjected to Standard Microbiological tests to find out whether the samples are contaminated with culturable microorganisms (Sterility Testing).

According to the report submitted to the Agriculture Ministry early last month, Dr Wickramaarachchi noted one of the samples was found to be highly contaminated with gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. The preliminary studies revealed the presence of bacteria Bacillus and Erwinia which can be pathogenic to plants. Tests on another sample also showed it was highly contaminated with Bacillus.

“We have submitted a comprehensive report after laboratory studies which reconfirm our preliminary findings sent to the Ministry. It took us more than four days to come up with a preliminary report,” Dr Wickramaarachchi said while responding to a statement issued by the Chinese embassy in Colombo last week questioning the findings in the report.

Dr Wickramaarachchi said if there was a dispute, China should have acted in terms of the International Plant Protection Convention rather than issuing statements from the embassy.

Meanwhile, the Ceylon Fertiliser Company (CFC) Ltd., which comes under the purview of the Ministry of Agriculture, informed the Chinese company which secured the tender to send 57,600mt of organic fertiliser that the ministry would not accept the first consignment based on quality assurance reports submitted by the National Plant Quarantine Service (NPQS).

In a letter addressed to Qingdao Seawin Biotech Group Ltd on Friday, CFC Chairman Janath Vidange said that according to the NPQS final reports, samples provided by the company were contaminated with several bacterial species including Erwinia and Bacillus and therefore could not be considered sterile.

“The samples do not comply with the Sri Lankan Standards,” he said.

The CFC also made it clear that 12,150mt of fertiliser in the vessel MV Hippo Spirit was not in conformity with the conditions set out in the contract. (SR)


 

Environment justice group moves CA to stop import of harmful organic fertiliser from ChinaAn environmental advocacy organization filed a petition in the Court of Appeal on Friday, seeking an injunction against the importation of polluted organic fertiliser from China, even after tests on preliminary samples showed they contained harmful microorganisms.The Center for Environmental Justice (CEJ) filed the petition against attempts to go ahead with the import of 96,000 metric tonnes (MT) of organic fertiliser at the cost of USD 63 million from China’s Qingdao Seawin Biotech Group Co., Ltd.

The Chinese company is expected to supply Sri Lanka with seaweed organic granular fertiliser. However, laboratory tests carried out by the National Plant Quarantine Service (NPQS) on samples proved they contain harmful microorganisms, pathogens and diseases harmful to the soil, plants and humans, the petition noted.

According to the NPQS laboratory test reports, two bacterial genera, Erwinia and Bacillus, are present in the sample provided by the Chinese company.

The CEJ alleged that contaminated fertiliser would pose a threat to minerals in the country’s soil and cited past instances of endangering ecosystems due to the spread of invasive plants and disease-causing organisms introduced from other countries.

Demanding that importing such contaminated fertiliser should not be allowed under the existing laws, the CEJ urged court to prosecute state officials involved in the importation of organic fertiliser in violation of the existing laws such as Sections 261, 262, 263, 277 and 289 of the Penal Code, Section 23(N) of the National Environmental Act and other relevant laws.

Apart from the CEJ, its Director and Senior Advisor Hemantha Withanage and Executive Director Dilena Pathragoda are the co-petitioners.

Agriculture Minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage, State Minister of Promoting the Production & Regulating the Supply of Organic Fertiliser Shasheendra Rajapaksha, Agriculture Director General Dr Ajantha de Silva, National Fertiliser Secretariat Director (Acting) Champika D. Dharmasena and National Plant Quarantine Service Additional Director Dr W.A.R.T. Wickramaarachchi are among the respondents.

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