Abstract:
Water  available  for  irrigation  has drastically  reduced  in  recent  years,especially  in agricultural  areas  of  Kenya,  due  to  climate  variability  as  well  as  unprecedented expansion of irrigation projects. As a result, any intervention that can save  water, while also increasing crop yields and quality of produce is a welcome intervention. This is where the System of Rice Intensification (SRI) comes in. SRI is a technology that changes how rice is grown in paddies, and which increases yields. SRI involves among its practices, the alternate wettingand drying of paddies, wider spacing and transplanting  only  one  seedling  per  hill  as  well  as  mechanical  weeding.  SRI  was introduced  in  Kenya  at  the  Mwea  Irrigation  Scheme  in  2009,  through  research, awareness  creation  and  training  of  various  cadres  of  stakeholders,  especially farmers.  Starting  with  just  two  adopter  farmers,  adoption  of  SRI  steadily  rose  to cover five irrigation schemes in Kenya, namely, Mwea, Ahero, Budalangi, West Kano and South West Kano. By December 2017, over 10,000 rice farmers had adopted SRI in the five schemes. The high adoption was driven by positive results. In Kenya, SRI increased  rice  yields  by  between  20% -100%  depending  on  variety,  while  water savings   of   25%-33%   have   been   recorded   under   controlled   experimentation. Research on SRIhas been conducted by PhD and masters students, thus validating the technology scientifically, showing increased yields and water-saving factors. The effects of SRI on mosquito breeding showed that all mosquito larvae died in paddies under  SRI,  while  they  remained  alive  and  multiplied  in  conventional  flooded paddies,  showing  the  technology  holds  promise  for  reducing  malaria  prevalence. Furthermore,  SRI  produces  a  harder,  better  grain  which  has  superior  qualities  on milling  and  marketing. Indeed,SRI  is  agreen  technology  which  holds  promise  for food  security,  water  savings,  health  and  environmental  benefits  and  improved productivity of rice in Africa.