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Title: Rice harvest is hurt in part by pollution shroudin


al001 - December 5, 2006 03:02 PM (GMT)
http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/nation/16167903.htm

The Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Posted on Tue, Dec. 05, 2006

Rice harvest is hurt in part by pollution shrouding country

By ANDREW BRIDGES
The Associated Press

WASHINGTON - Pollution has stifled growth in India's rice harvest, cheating the staple crop of the rain and cool nighttime temperatures needed to flourish, researchers said Monday.

Since the mid-1980s, the stubborn brown cloud of pollution that shrouds much of India, coupled with increased concentrations of greenhouse gases, have limited both the yields and extent of rice farms in the nine Indian states that account for most of the country's wet-season harvest, University of California researchers report in a new study.

Had both forms of pollution been cut, India's rice harvest across those states would have increased more than 14 percent between 1985 and 1998, they report. That could have helped restore the rate of growth to what was seen in the 1960s and '70s, in the immediate wake of the "Green Revolution" that allowed India to become self sufficient in rice production.

The researchers pin at least part of the blame on two pollution-linked phenomena, though they acknowledge that they only augment other explanations for the stagnating rice output. Those include a fall in prices, soil exhaustion and deteriorating irrigation infrastructure.

"We are in no way arguing atmospheric brown clouds and greenhouse gases are the only reason for this slowdown, but it's an explanation not suggested previously and contributes to the slowdown," said study co-author Jeffrey Vincent, environmental research director at the University of California Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation.

Details appeared Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

One of the world's largest clouds of pollution, formed from soot from fires, factories and tailpipes, hangs over much of India. That cloud cuts the amount of sunlight hitting the Earth and in turn reduces rainfall, in part because its dimming effect dents the amount of water evaporated from the sea.

The shading cloud also has a cooling effect, though. Previous studies have suggested that can offset the warming caused by increased greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, where they trap heat.

Instead, the researchers found by combining historical Indian rice harvest data and a climate model that the phenomena act in concert to curtail rice production. The clouds can cool the Earth, but only during the day. At night, greenhouse gases keep temperatures higher than they would have been otherwise, they said. Those higher nighttime temperatures stress and restrict the growth of rice.




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