Innovate to irrigate: 19 innovations to increase food production without draining the earth
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This issue is one we should be thinking about more and more often. As populations continue to grow, there needs to be new innovations to increase sustainable food production, without draining the earth. With factors such as climate change impacting water supplies and security, business-as-usual just won’t cut it.
For this reason, on January 29th, 2018, the Water for Food International Forum Innovation Fair: Innovate to Irrigate, gathered together 19 organizations who are leading the way in this challenge, through creative technologies that support farmer-led irrigation practices.

took place on January 29th, 2018 at the World Bank.
In her opening remarks, Laura Tuck, Vice President for Sustainable Development at the World Bank, applauded the focus of “highlight[ing] technologies that both improve the expansion and intensification of farmer-led irrigation, but also really help us address the risk they raise for the sustainability of resources.”
Below are just a few of the innovations from some of the most creative organizations in the irrigation field:
1. KickStart International
KickStart International aims to meet the needs of small-scale farmers in Africa by selling its products through the local private sector supply chain.
“We design, market, and promote small-scale irrigation technologies that are efficient, sustainable, very low-cost, and high-quality,” explained Jenna Rogers-Rafferty, Director of Development & Strategic Alliances.
Incorporating feedback from farmers, the organization is currently working to develop and improve a solar-pump technology focusing on durability and efficiency.
KickStart has also worked with an award-winning film team to produce a short documentary, A Seed of Maize, which “depicts how difficult the decision process is for farmers when they’re thinking about investing in something like irrigation,” according to Rogers-Rafferty. This film has been used to show both farming communities and partners all the considerations that go into adopting new irrigation practices.
2. Upstream

Upstream hopes that presenting the information in this way will aid decision-making: “We’re trying to make it as easy to use as possible, by taking traditionally very difficult GIS processes that require degree, and making them so that any practitioner or developer could go learn," said Marshall Moutenot, Co-Founder.
In addition to monitoring, the program allows users to search for and pinpoint things such as rice fields in California, or where in an irrigation system there might be room for hydro-power.
“The sky is the limit,” Moutenot added. “If the satellites exist, we can get as detailed as those allow us.”
3. Acclima
With a mission to increase productivity and efficiency in agriculture, Acclima is focused on the precise application of irrigation water. At the Innovation Fair, they were showcasing two Time Domain Reflectometers (TDR), which do just that.
It’s the only sensor on the market that is able to accurately report the soil water content despite the salinity of the soil under normal growing conditions,” Kingsley Horton, General Manager at Acclima, explained as a buzz of conference participants gathered around to examine the TDR sensors. “Acclima TDR sensors also accurately report soil electrical conductivity and temperature thus facilitating more efficient application of fertilizer.”
Because salinity can interfere with measurements, this sensor allows farmers to get an accurate reading to reduce water waste, pumping costs, and erosion, while increasing crop yields and nutrient uptake into the plants.
So what’s on the agenda? In order to continue to bring prices down and make these products available to small-scale farmers, Acclima is seeking collaboration with major partners in the field.

4. Dynamax
Dynamax is also measuring moisture levels, but this time in plants. From small flowers to large trees, “we can put sensors on a plant that tell us exactly how much the [water] flow is for one day. So we can tell exactly what that plant needs in water,” offers Eric Pena, Business Development for Dyanamax.
This data is then uploaded to a cloud based system, so the data can be read and compared across all plants surveyed. Pena added: “It’s the whole next level. If you give a plant exactly the right amount of water for the efficiency, then it actually raises the yield.”
In his remarks at the Innovation Fair, U.S Congressman Jeff Fortenberry (R-NE) spoke compellingly about “this idea of economic regeneration, particularly the use of our land – so we are helpfully harvesting it, and leaving it in a sustainable manner for those who come after us.”
By bringing together some of the most creative minds working on this challenge, the Innovation Fair hopes to have made a contribution towards this vision.
To learn about more innovations in the field, check out the rest organizations who joined us at the 2018 Water For Food Innovation Fair:
Interesting work!
It is the blog about irrigation,thanks for sharing information.
Everyone loves it when folks come together and share thoughts.
Great blog, keep it up! Is it OK to share on Reddit?
Keep up the really good work!
Interesting work!
These are the Hero's . Salute to tehir dedications and passion to make a world a better place. Convergence of Human Intelligence and Technology !
In my 32 years of farming experience, I have come across a wide range of innovations in agriculture. All these science-based innovations are developed with the objective of enabling ease of doing farming. Though most of these innovative technologies are superior in their own way, I consider the technology that increases the productivity of water which is becoming an extremely scarce commodity as the BEST and outstanding technology. My practical experience in drip irrigation in rice is, I am able to conserve 70 % of the precious water resources. The water crisis is the single most challenging tasks these days. This will further escalate in the years to come. At the same time, we must produce more with fewer resources. In this context, Drip Irrigation is THE technology farmers need. In rice, we have been using an enormous quantity of water in the conventional flood irrigation method. As we can reduce the water usage ( wastage ), Drip Irrigation in rice is going to be the real game changer in rice farming
Amazing innovations
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Interesting work! We need to improve the efficiency of the irrigation system and water productivity of each crop to produce more food while maintaining water for the ecosystem.