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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Bangladesh
Will Dramatically Expand Technology That Doubles
Efficiency of Urea Fertilizer Use
The Government of Bangladesh has announced that it
will expand urea deep placement (UDP)—a technology
that doubles the efficiency of urea fertilizer
use—to almost 1 million hectares (ha) of rice land,
reaching about 1.6 million farm families, in the
coming boro or dry season.
UDP is the insertion of large urea briquettes into
the rice root zone after transplanting. UDP cuts
nitrogen losses significantly. Farmers who use UDP
can increase yields by 25% while using less than 50%
as much urea as before.
The effectiveness of UDP technology in Bangladesh
was proven through research funded by the
International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD)
and implemented with the assistance of IFDC—An
International Center for Soil Fertility and
Agricultural Development. The Ministry of
Agriculture of Bangladesh has requested that IFDC
help implement the expanded project.
“Millions of rice farmers in Asia depend on urea
fertilizer to meet the nitrogen needs of
high-yielding rice varieties,” says Dr. Amit Roy,
IFDC CEO. Most farmers, including those in
Bangladesh, Vietnam, and Cambodia, broadcast urea
into the floodwater.
But broadcasting is a highly inefficient application
method because most of the nitrogen is lost to the
air and water. Only one bag of urea in three is used
by the plants.
Using UDP, Bangladesh’s dry season rice production
is expected to increase by 548,000 tons, according
to the Department of Agricultural Extension (DAE).
“Yields were
comparatively good where urea was deep placed,” says
Dr. C.S. Karim, Advisor, Bangladesh Ministry of
Agriculture. “If we can save at least 20% of the
urea by adopting UDP technology, we can supply a
large part of the country’s demand from our own
factories.”
UDP
technology improves nitrogen use efficiency by
keeping most of the urea nitrogen in the soil close
to the rice roots and out of the floodwater, where
it is more susceptible to loss as gaseous compounds
or runoff.
The technology not only improves farmer income, but
creates employment because of the need for the
briquettes. Ten Bangladeshi manufacturers have
produced and sold more than 2,000 briquette-making
machines. The new UDP program will include the
manufacture and establishment of some 300
briquetting machines to manufacture 2.7-gram
briquettes.
UDP technology was introduced in Bangladesh in the
late 1990s; by 2006 more than half a million farmers
had adopted UDP. Average paddy yields had increased
20% to 25%, and income from paddy sales increased by
10%, while urea expenditures decreased 32%. Farmers
who use UDP can reduce urea use by 78 to 150 kg/ha
and increase paddy yields by 900 to 1,100 kg/ha. The
net return to farmers of using UDP versus
broadcasting urea averages $188/ha.
“I’m delighted that the Government of Bangladesh
endorses the merit of this technology and has asked
IFDC to be a part of the project,” Roy says.
Bangladesh’s success with UDP has become a model
for other rice-growing countries, Roy says. IFDC has
also introduced UDP in Cambodia, Vietnam, Nepal,
Nigeria, Mali, Togo, and Malawi.
Development of the UDP technology was funded by the
U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). |