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Sri Lanka appeals for farmers to plant more rice as food shortage looms

Colombo, Sri Lanka
Reuters

Sri Lanka wants farmers to plant more rice as part of plans to avert a severe food shortage, a top official said on Tuesday, as experts warned of a 50 per cent drop in production that would worsen the impact of its already-severe financial crisis. 

Sri Lanka is in the throes of its worst such crisis in more than seven decades. The island of 22 million people has run out of foreign exchange reserves and is unable to pay for critical imports including fuel, food and medicine.

Sri Lanka Colombo bread vendor

A vendor eats bread as she waits for customers at a vegetable market, amid the country’s economic crisis in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on 20th May. PICTURE: Reuters/Adnan Abidi

“It is clear the food situation is becoming worse. We request all farmers to step into their fields in the next five to ten days and cultivate paddy,” Agriculture Minister Mahinda Amaraweera told a press conference on Tuesday. 

Sri Lanka’s new Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has warned of a severe food shortage by August and estimates $US600 million will be needed to import fertliser, which the country is struggling to raise. 

Most fertliser will arrive too late for the next cultivation cycle that usually kicks off in early June, a group of agriculture experts have warned. In the next two seasons, sufficient quantities of fertilizer will not be available to fulfill the nutrient requirements of any of the major crops of rice, tea and maize. 

Buddhi Marambe, an agriculture professor at the University of Peradeniya, said some areas will lose more than 50 per cent of the paddy yield even if action is taken. 

“Even if we bring fertiliser today, it will be too late to have a good harvest,” he said. 

Talks are underway with India to procure 65,000 tonnes of fertliser and appeals have been made to seven other countries, Amaraweera said. But he did not disclose details of when shipments would arrive. 

Last month the central bank announced it would “preemptively” default on some of its external debt as the currency depreciated more than 50 per cent and food inflation hit 46 per cent in April.

 

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