Heavy rains damage rice crop in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta
In the Mekong Delta, heavy rains from a tropical depression have disrupted rice harvesting. In Soc Trang, inundated fields are hindering the harvest of 19,000ha of summer-autumn rice, raising costs for farmers. In Kien Giang, the largest rice-producing province, farmers are harvesting the 276,000ha crop but face delays. In Ca Mau, nearly 600ha of rice have been damaged by rain. Local authorities are pushing for irrigation improvements to manage water levels and protect crops. Farmers in Can Tho have completed harvesting 71,280ha with stable yields.
HCM CITY: Farmers in the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta are having difficulty harvesting their early summer-autumn rice and protect young rice plants since heavy rains have inundated many fields.
The country’s rice granary has been hit by prolonged heavy rains in recent days brought by a tropical depression.
In Soc Trang Province, farmers in low-lying places like My Tu and Thanh Tri districts and Nga Nam Town are beginning the harvest of 19,000ha of summer-autumn rice but many fields are inundated, reducing yields and increasing costs.
In My Tu District, My Tu Commune has 100ha of ripe rice but farmers cannot harvest them because machines cannot operate in flooded fields.
Ly Van Tao in My Tu Commune said his one hectare of rice ripened last week but he could not harvest it.
The commune does not have an electric pumping station to bail the water out of fields and most farmers have to do it themselves, and this raises production costs by VNĐ1-2 million (US$40-80) per hectare, he said.
In low-lying areas, rice fields are often 25-35cm under water during the rainy season, according to the provincial Irrigation Sub-department.
Pham Tan Dao, its head, said his agency is mobilising farmers to pump water out of fields and operating sluices to drain them.
In Kien Giang, the country’s largest rice producing province, farmers sowed the summer-autumn rice crop on 276,000ha staggering the cropping.
They began harvesting the crop at the end of last month, have completed 150,000ha so far, and expect to finish it in August.
Le Huu Toan, director of the Kien Giang Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, said to protect the remaining crop, local administrations and farmers would mobilise all resources and take advantage of sunny weather to harvest rice quickly when it is about 85 per cent ripe.
In Ca Mau Province, heavy rains have damaged nearly 600ha of rice in Tran Van Thoi District sowed late and are 40 days old.
The last dry season caused farmers sow the summer-autumn rice 15-30 days later than normal, and so their young rice crop has been inundated and damaged in the prolonged rain, according to the Tran Van Thoi Bureau of Agriculture and Rural Development.
Nguyan Viet Khai, its head, said rice fields have often been inundated during the rainy season in recent years, and resolving the problem needs a closed irrigation system with 16 pumping stations with a total capacity of 600,000cu.m of water per hour.
The district has petitioned the provincial People’s Committee and Department of Agriculture and Rural Development to build the irrigation system and pumping stations, he added.
In this summer-autumn crop, Ca Mau has planted 35,000ha of rice, 29,000ha in Tran Van Thoi.
In other localities, farmers have begun harvesting rice early to avoid risks from the weather by the time the crop ripens.
In Can Tho, farmers have harvested summer-autumn rice earlier than scheduled and completed harvesting all 71,280ha of summer- autumn rice.
Their average yield has been 5.9 tonnes per hectare, the same as a year ago.
Source Link : https://www.thestar.com.my/aseanplus/aseanplus-news/2024/07/26/heavy-rains-damage-rice-crop-in-vietnam039s-mekong-delta