Early sowing of heat-tolerant wheat, new machinery and agronomic management enable 1.1M farmers in South Asia: Greater resilience, productivity and climate change adaptation

High-yielding wheat varieties with tolerance to heat stress, in combination with systemic innovations for climate change adaptation, enabled farmers in the Eastern and Western Indo-Gangetic Plains (IGP) to sow earlier and grow their income, while reducing their environmental footprint by avoiding burning crop residue and reducing irrigation. 0.3 million farmers in Western IGP and 0.8 million in Eastern IGP practiced the innovations, achieving extra yields with less irrigation, and earning an additional income of ~US$ 200/ha.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: CGIAR Research Program on Wheat
Format: Case Study biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2020-12-31
Subjects:climate change, farmers, climate, adaptation, yields, productivity, varieties, income, resilience, climate change adaptation, irrigation, management, wheat, stress, sowing, tolerance, heat stress, south asia, heat, burning, plains, asia, case studies, agrifood systems, rural development,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/121809
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Summary:High-yielding wheat varieties with tolerance to heat stress, in combination with systemic innovations for climate change adaptation, enabled farmers in the Eastern and Western Indo-Gangetic Plains (IGP) to sow earlier and grow their income, while reducing their environmental footprint by avoiding burning crop residue and reducing irrigation. 0.3 million farmers in Western IGP and 0.8 million in Eastern IGP practiced the innovations, achieving extra yields with less irrigation, and earning an additional income of ~US$ 200/ha.