Malaysia is attempting to use cloud seeding to bring much-needed rain to the country’s “rice bowl” north, where a drought has delayed planting of the staple crop and raised supply fears.
“This year ... has been affected by prolonged dry weather, low rainfall and reduced dam water levels,” Malaysian Minister of Agriculture and Food Security Mohamad Sabu said.
The conditions mean farmers have missed two of the three usual planting phases for “wet direct seeding” of rice, a technique that requires fields to be flooded. Dry direct seeding is an alternative that is viable until June.
Photo: AFP
However, farmers say the technique provides lower yields and that weather conditions have rendered it impossible in some fields anyway.
While more than 50 percent of the region’s rice fields have been prepared, just a fraction have been planted as farmers await the rain.
Planting has “not been canceled,” Mohamad insisted, but “temporary adjustments and mitigation measures are being implemented.”
In Kedah’s Muda Agricultural Development Authority areas, the main dam reservoir for the region is at just eight percent, according to local reports.
HIGH COSTS
Farmer Abdul Rashid Yob, who has a three hectare paddy in the region, said the drought’s impact was being compounded by rising fuel costs linked to the war in Iran.
“Even where water is available, many cannot afford to proceed due to high costs.”
Rice is a staple crop in Malaysia, which consumes about 2.5 million tonnes a year, about half of which is produced domestically.
Most of that comes from northern peninsular Malaysia, with Kedah the biggest producer.
The region is “strategically important to Malaysia’s food security”, Mohamad said.
So with farmers facing dry brown fields that should be lush, flooded paddies, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim this week announced cloud-seeding operations to trigger rain.
The process involves spraying particles such as silver iodide and salt into clouds from aircraft to produce rainfall and is used to affect weather patterns or even tamp down air pollution.
But success depends on atmospheric conditions — without clouds, seeding does not work. Reports suggest officials hope to begin seeding soon, but no date has been publicly set.
The government has announced programs to offset fuel costs, including boosts to aid programs.
STRUGGLING WITH CONDITIONS
Fitri Amit, a small-scale rice farmer in the Perak region to the south, was skeptical of the measures, which he said were often delayed, arriving only once farmers’ “capital has already been drained”.
“Farmers prefer that support be given by increasing the paddy price,” he said, referring to the sale price of cultivated rice.
“If the paddy price is guaranteed, once they sell, they get the money,” he said.
Although he is south of Kedah’s dire weather, he has also been struggling with dry conditions.
“Irrigation was stopped because the reservoir levels were low,” he said.
While Malaysian rice farmers have struggled with drought or erratic rainfall in the past, “this year’s challenges are more significant”, said Mohamad, citing “prolonged hot weather, lower-than-usual rainfall and declining water reserves in several irrigation dams.”
The crisis comes with Asia bracing for a possible return of the El Nino weather phenomenon, which brings worldwide changes in winds, air pressure and rainfall.
Forecasters say it could develop as soon as May to July, and initial observations suggest it could be particularly strong.
Asia is often heavily affected by El Nino systems, which bring heatwaves and droughts to part of the region and heavy rains elsewhere.
Starlux Airlines Co (星宇航空) today unveiled a long-haul network expansion plan at a shareholders’ meeting in Taipei, including direct flights to Barcelona, Spain, and Zurich, Switzerland, as well as a service connecting Taipei, Sydney and New Zealand. Starlux is to become the first Taiwanese carrier to offer non-stop services to the two European cities, while the inaugural oceanic route is expected to expand transit opportunities within the Australia-New Zealand market, Starlux said. Flight services to Chicago, Dallas, Washington and New York are under evaluation, the airline added. Prior to the shareholders’ meeting, the airline earlier this year announced that it would be
Netherlands-based semiconductor equipment supplier ASML Holding NV yesterday said that it is planning to hire an additional 1,000 people in Taiwan this year in response to growing demand from clients. ASML had previously planned to recruit 600 people this year, but that the plan has been adjusted upward, ASML vice president and ASML Taiwan general manager Grace Wang (汪佳慧) told reporters. ASML has a workforce of more than 4,500 in Taiwan, accounting for about 10 percent of its global total, Wang said. This year’s recruitment campaign would focus on adding people in the customer support, manufacturing and supply chain domains to assist ASML
UNDER MICROSCOPE: Taiwan detained three people who allegedly conspired to buy servers in Taiwan and export them using fraudulent documentation, prosecutors said Nvidia Corp chief executive officer Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) on Saturday urged Super Micro Computer Inc to tighten up on compliance after Taiwan detained three people this week for allegedly making fraudulent declarations about artificial intelligence (AI) servers made by its US partner. The development marked the nation’s first crackdown on semiconductor smuggling, which grew after the US slapped restrictions on exports of high-end chips such as Nvidia AI accelerators to China. Nvidia is “rigorous” in explaining regulations to all of its partners, Huang told reporters after arriving in Taipei. “Ultimately Super Micro has to run their own company,” he said in response to
Nvidia Corp yesterday announced that CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) would attend an employee meeting in Taipei tomorrow to celebrate the launch of the company’s Taiwan headquarters project. Huang would attend a gathering at the site of Nvidia’s planned headquarters in Beitou Shilin Technology Park (北投士林科技園區), the company said in a statement. After arriving in Taiwan on Saturday last week, Huang told reporters that he plans to meet with Quanta Computer Inc (廣達) chairman Barry Lam (林百里) and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) chairman C.C. Wei (魏哲家), and would attend the groundbreaking ceremony for Nvidia’s Taiwan headquarters tomorrow. Nvidia has not yet applied