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Africa and the Americas Learn to Farm the Brazilian Way PDF Print E-mail
2007 - July 2007
Written by Isaura Daniel   
Thursday, 12 July 2007 18:21

Santos at his corn plantation. By Isaura Daniel Of the 26 Brazilian states, nine have semiarid areas, where rain is rare and irregular. However, these states produce a variety of foods that range from fruit, corn, beans and sorghum, to cattle, sheep and goat milk.

The years of drought that these regions face, some in which rain does not fall more than five days, have made Brazil into a specialist in producing in lands with a dearth of water. And now the country is also sending to other countries its experience in management of scarce water for planting and growing.

This year, the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa) is going to teach the citizens of Mozambique, in Africa, the technology of underground barrages. The solution is simple.

"You dig a ditch and put some waterproofing material in it," explains the water resource researcher at the Embrapa Semiarid, Luiza Teixeira de Lima Brito. The ditch is vertical.

The waterproofing material, which may be a tarpaulin, is fixed into the earth with mortar. The hole is then covered with mortar. The work, similar to an underground wall, should be built beside the farmland and will hold rainwater for more time during the crop season.

According to a study by the Embrapa, There are around 200 underground barrages in the northeastern Brazilian states of Paraíba, Pernambuco and Bahia. One of them is in the interior of Afrânio, in the land of José dos Santos.

"It holds the water in the plantation area," explained Santos. The barrage, 525 feet wide, benefits an area of two hectares. There, farmer Afrânio grows grass for his cattle, sheep and goats, as well as rice, passion fruit, watermelon, cassava, banana, guava and mangoes. The corn crop, which is not right next to the barrage, is also favored by the technology. "It worked out," stated Santos.

In Mozambique, the Embrapa professionals are also going to talk about cisterns, a system through which rainwater is collected for household use in rural zones. The water falls on the roof of the house and runs into a reservoir from where it is later taken out by the family with a manual pump. In some cases, this water is also used to quench the thirst of the herds.

Rain, in the semiarid, is focussed few days a year, and both the underground barrage and the cisterns allow for it to be used over a longer period of time.

If it is not stored, it is lost, as the soil in the region is shallow and the water filters down to the rock layer and runs away. The technologies, according to Luiza, are not new, but were adapted and spread by institutions like the Embrapa.

Embrapa, incidentally, took these water conservation techniques to dry areas in Haiti, last year, and in previous years to countries like Guatemala, Peru, Honduras and Panama.

The transfer of information to other regions of the world is normally through agreements between the government of Brazil and the partner country.

"Embrapa is prominent in tropical agriculture and much of this knowledge is being used by other countries. Water management by Embrapa Semiarid is one of the areas that generates greatest international interest," stated the general head of the unit, Pedro Carlos Gama da Silva, a doctor in Applied Economics.

The use of underground barrages should be spread around the semiarid in coming years. Organization Agriculture in the Semiarid (ASA) started executing a pilot project called Program One Land and Two Waters (P1+2) three months ago, to promote the use of water retention technologies for production in dry areas in Brazil.

It is the complementation of another program, One Million Cisterns (P1MC), which started being developed in 2003 and has helped build 195,441 cisterns in the semiarid, Maranhão (Northeast) and Espírito Santo (Southeast). In the P1+2, the use of mud-patches, small areas for retention of rainwater that will later be used in farming, should also be promoted.

Irrigation

Irrigation is also being used in the Brazilian semiarid, mainly in areas of fruit planting. However, it is not, according to researchers, the most adequate solution for dry areas.

"It is the shortest route to solve the problem of production in the semiarid, but it has its limitations, one of which is the availability of water. And not all soil may be irrigated. When we combine these factors, the areas appropriate for irrigation are very few," said Gama.

The cost of irrigation, in the case of some cultures, like beans and corn, is too much, according to the head of the Embrapa Semiarid. This is so true that irrigated areas in the semiarid normally grow fruit, which have a greater added value. This is the case with the São Francisco River Valley, in which grapes are grown.

The semiarid is present in eight northeastern Brazilian states: Piauí, Ceará, Rio Grande do Norte, Paraíba, Pernambuco, Alagoas, Sergipe and Bahia, as well as the north of the southeastern state of Minas Gerais.

The region is formed of 100 million hectares and has its geographic center in the cities of Petrolina, in Pernambuco, and Juazeiro, in Bahia. The Brazilian semiarid has a population of around 30 million people.

Anba - www.anba.com.br



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Comments (9)Add Comment
Quite Laughable....the headline !!!!!
written by ch.c., July 13, 2007
What Africa and Brazil are using to......, prepare the land, seed planting, grow and harvest their agriculture !!!!

Monsanto/Bayer/Syngenta....for seeds and fongicides spraying, Caterpllar/Komatsu or the likes for land levelling, John Deere/Massey Fergusson/ Claas and the likes for tractors and harvesters !!!!!
And also FOREIGN TRUCKS......for transportation !!!!!


LAUGH.....LAUGH....LAUGH..... !!!!

OTHERWISE....Brazil and Africa would still use a plough....and cattle for traction and power !!!!!

Ohhhhhh....but they still use that....TODAY ! Eeven in Brazil
Just look by yourselves at the videos in Globo Rural TV !!!!

How many hundreds millions tons of sugarcane is s till....MANUALLY....harvested...IN BRAZIL ????
200 MILLIONMS TONS !!!!! YESSSSS 40 % OF ALL SUGARCANE IS STILL MANUALLY HARVESTED IN BRAZIL....JUST LIKE 2 CENTURIES AGO !!!!

And what is your guess of how many tons are still manually harvested in ....the USA ??????

Lets face it, without the developed world technology and knowledges......BRAZIL is still FAR FAR BEHIND !!!!

Please name 1 Brazilian Trucks/cars manufacturers ! NONE EXIST ! simple
As to your second class tractors, they are made from developed nations technology !!!! the new ones are made in developed nations !


Some of the titles....
written by bo, July 13, 2007
to these articles are quite humorous. They make it sound as if Brazil has pioneered everything from medicine to space travel. It's all to get a response.
...
written by Ric, July 13, 2007
The other day I tossed out a whole shelf full of agriculture books, most of them printed by the USDA or State dept., every conceivable subject on wells, cisterns, avoiding mofu in the humidity, drip irrigation, fertilizer, nitrates, plans for making pumps, delivery systems, some of these books well over thirty years old. Many in Spanish and Portuguese.

Literally thousands of these subjects are still available free. But the trends are away from small subsistance farmers all over Brazil, and toward mechanization, capitalization, and organizati

It´s over, except for a shrinking minority
Ric
written by João da Silva, July 13, 2007
It´s over, except for a shrinking minority


Sad,but it is true Ric. I tossed out many of similar books too! Small farmers will end up as sugar cane cutters or die poor.
the goverment of brasil doesnt want its people to know
written by FORREST ALLEN BROWN, July 13, 2007
ric you tossed out a whole school of info

but remember most brasilians will only beleive what they are told by other brasilians

not out of books that have been used in school for 50 years or more

the only thing that is shrinking is the food to feed there own people
To:Forrest
written by João da Silva, July 14, 2007
the only thing that is shrinking is the food to feed there own people



How true,skipper.brw, where the hell is our mutual friend, the Half Hispanic American.? Do you think that the sharks ate him in the Pacific Ocean? smilies/grin.gif
Cautionary Comment
written by Ric, July 18, 2007
Just don´t call him a half breed. That´s a now rarely used extremely offensive term, considered a slur. Just trying to provide info here.

When I was a kid the adults used it frequently but thankfully it has pretty much passed from the vocabulary.
...
written by ali, July 22, 2007
we have liquid chelated fertilizer. Anyone intrested please contact.
Good information
written by Robert L Birt, August 18, 2007
I welcome this information and want to know more about farming in Brazil.....Is it possible to get water with deep drilling and pivot irrigation In the areas covered in this report? Thanks for any information for a future investor in Brazil

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