Thai farmers brace for water shortages
Bangkok Post: 24 Feb 2010
Farmers brace for bitter 'water war'
Hundreds of villages crippled by droughtAn early drought is raising fears of a "water war" among rice farmers, the Royal Irrigation Department says.
Large reservoirs and dams are only about 66% full, director-general Chalit Damrongsak said yesterday.
The department fears there will not be enough irrigation water to last through the hot season.
The country could not avoid a severe drought if water use exceeded earlier predictions, Mr Chalit said.
The situation in the central provinces was particularly worrying. Too many farmers there were growing off-season rice which uses large amounts of water, he said.
No more than 9.5 million rai of off-season rice should be grown this year if a severe water shortage was to be avoided. But 11.4 million rai was already being cultivated, mostly in the Central Plains.
Farmers are looking to invest in a second crop of off-season rice despite the looming threat of drought, the department said.
The water war was a matter "of when, not if", Mr Chalit said.
Poor water management would result in serious hardship for farmers.
The department has prepared 1,200 additional water pumps and 295 water tanks to be distributed to drought-stricken areas to ease the impact of the shortage.
Close to 600 water pumps have recently been sent to 36 provinces.
Farmers were growing off-season rice because it fetches higher prices, said Prasert Kosalwit, chief of the Rice Department.
Agriculture and Cooperatives Minister Theera Wongsamut said eight artificial rain-making centres would be reopened on Friday.
The ministry hopes the centres would help double the amount of rainfall in drought-affected areas during the dry season.
The 8th Royal Irrigation Office in Nakhon Ratchasima yesterday described the water shortage in much of the lower Northeast as "alarming". Buri Ram is the hardest hit province.
In the South, the Waterworks Authority Office in Surat Thani's Koh Samui district said there were enough tap water supplies on the island to last the next three or four months.
Hotels and resorts have been advised to stock up on water.
In the North, residents in some areas of Tak's Muang district are buying drinking water because of tap water shortages.
Parts of the province are also blanketed by haze from a forest fire in neighbouring Burma.
Mae Hong Son has begun to suffer from air pollution caused by the billowing smoke In Nan, more than 500 villages in 13 districts have been declared drought-stricken. More than 50,000 rai of farmland has been damaged.
http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/local/33402/farmers-brace-for-bitter-water-war---------------------------------------------------------------------------Farmers to rally in Bangkok on Friday
Bangkok Post * Published: 24/02/2010 at 09:59 AMFarmers from the Central, North and Northeast regions will rally outside Government House on Friday to ask for assistance from the government, Wichian Puanglamjiag, vice chairman of Thai Farmers Association said on Wednesday morning.
Farmers from Suphan Buri, Nakhon Pathom, Ang Thong, Sing Buri, Nonthaburi, Pathum Thani, Chainat, Nakhon Sawan, Phichit, Kampaeng Petch, Pitsanulok, Sukhothai and from several provinces in the Northeast will travel by pickup trucks and farm tractors to gather in front of Government House, said Mr Wichian.
“Farmers demand concrete measures to help them overcome the problem of low rice prices Farmers do not like the farm income guarantee scheme being imposed by the state,†he said.
He denied the rally was politically motivated, saying it was for the survival of all farmers.
“If the demand is ignored, the farmers might join forces with the red-shirts in rallying against the government,†he warned.
The Supreme Court’s Criminal Division for Holders of Political Positions will on Friday give its ruling on the seizure of 76 billion baht in frozen assets from ousted former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra and his family.
http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/local/169513/farmers-to-rally-at-govt-house-on-friday