Saltwater is shrinking Bangladesh’s arable land, but a simple approach of planting crops in containers shows surprising success
January 30, 2015 | |
KHULNA, BANGLADESH—The soil in Knolkhol village in southwest Bangladesh has become increasingly salty because of incursions of seawater. The situation became particularly acute in the in 2009, which brought storm surges that and flooded farmland. After 2009 vegetable crops planted in the ground there yielded only meager returns—if they didn’t fail completely.
As a delta formed by three of Asia’s largest rivers, Bangladesh is naturally prone to flooding and waterlogging. And with most of its land at or below sea level, the country is highly vulnerable to extreme weather exacerbated by . Rising sea levels, storm surges and violent storms have compounded the problem of increasing soil salinity across the country, particularly in coastal areas alongside brackish rivers.
The resulting decline in cultivable land is a pressing concern for Bangladesh, one of the world’s most densely populated countries. (Imagine half the U.S. population living in a space about the size of Iowa.) Bangladesh’s from about 156 million today to around 250 million by 2050. Vertical gardens are one simple way that the rural poor can adapt to climate change and increase food supply using scarce resources. They could complement other, more , such as the cultivation of rice and other hardy crops such as sunflowers. “There is no country with such population density where natural resources are stretched to their very limits,” says Craig Meisner, south Asia regional director and country director for Bangladesh at , an international nonprofit organization headquartered in Malaysia. WorldFish in southern Bangladesh, along with other means of coping with climate change. If adaptation “fails here, it will certainly fail in many other countries,” Meisner remarks. “However, if it succeeds here, it gives hope for the world’s future.”
CORNUCOPIA: Shobitha Debna of Knolkholout of sacks and onto her roof.
The result is a garden like the one that belongs to Shobitha Debna, a 35-year-old mother in Knolkhol. The garden occupies just a corner of Debna’s dirt yard, yet it yields hundreds of kilograms of pumpkins, gourds, green beans, eggplants, red amaranth, beets, carrots, cauliflower, coriander, cabbage, green chili peppers and spinach each season. In addition the tin roof of Debna’s home harbors a lush tangle of leaves and vines that sprout fat bottle gourds. The vines grow from just a few large, plastic sacks that once held animal feed. Extra food like this goes a long way for the rural poor in Bangladesh, who eke out a living on a few dollars a day.
Debna says she used to grow just one or two kinds of vegetables but now her vertical garden yields a cornucopia that feeds her family. Finding enough fresh water for her garden can be a challenge, she admits. But so far that hasn’t stopped a bounty of vegetables from flourishing in soil that lay fallow not so long ago.
Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.
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