AWD Training
AWD Training
Water Scarcity
Worldwide, water for agriculture is getting increasingly scarce. By 2025, 15-20 million hectares of irrigated rice may suffer water scarcity. Interventions to respond to water scarcity are called water-savings and imply a reduced use of irrigation water.
What is AWD?
Alternate Wetting and Drying (AWD) is a water-saving technology that lowland (paddy) rice farmers can apply to reduce their water use in irrigated fields. In AWD, irrigation water is applied to flood the field a certain number of days after the disappearance of ponded water. Hence, the field is alternately flooded and non-flooded. The number of days of non-flooded soil in AWD between irrigations can vary from 1 day to more than 10 days.
Safe AWD?
The threshold of 15 cm water depth (below the surface) before irrigation is called Safe AWD as this will not cause any yield decline. In Safe AWD, water savings are in the order of 1530%. After creating confidence that Safe AWD does not reduce yield, farmers may experiment by lowering the threshold level for irrigation to 20, 25, 30 cm depth, or even deeper. Lowering the threshold level for irrigation will increase the water savings, but some yield penalty may occur. Such a yield penalty may be acceptable when the price of water is high or when water is very scarce.
Field water tube from PVC Note the holes on all sides
Produced by the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) 2009, IRRI, All rights reserved August 2009