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Annex 14: FAO Guideline “A Framework for Reclamation Action Plan for Affected Soils”


Agricultural affected lands need to be quickly rehabilitated to restore the production capacity of farmers and ensure food security in rural areas. A framework of intervention is proposed to ensure that the next cropping season can start in fairly good conditions for medium to low damaged areas and that for badly affected areas rehabilitation works or plans for reorientation of production are carried out soon.

Reclaiming field/soils affected by the tsunami will depend on the severity of the damage and the resilience of the system. FAO proposes to confront this crisis with an approach developed in three steps:

1. Classifying and zoning the damages and the resilience of the system.

2. Identifying the capacity of farmers and local communities in restoring progressively their production capability.

3. Designing and scheduling a consistent set of targeted interventions for the short and long term, for each zone, considering the above as well as the agro-climatic constraints (rainfall, agricultural calendar and usual practices)

Given the extreme dispersion of sites to be investigated and rehabilitated, it is critical that local expertise is engaged and strengthened to deal with the diagnosis and remediation.

Therefore FAO aims to help governments and regional authorities in increasing the local capacity through:

1. Assessing the needs

Damages differ by nature:

or by intensity which depends on three main characteristics of the particular location:

FAO proposes a simple classification for assessing the damages based on 3 main subsets:

Methodology

Rationale: The level of support and the specific set of interventions required to return to normal situation in affected areas depend on damages intensity, capacity of main infrastructure to allow remediation, the farming capacity both human and material to reengage in agricultural activities and reclamation works when required.

It is proposed to quantify the damages through ranked indicators for each subset using the following tables.

FIELD DAMAGES

characterises the gravity of damages at field level

(see table 1)




INFRASTRUCTURE CAPACITY

indicates the constraints faced at system levels that may impede carried out civil works and field works (land levelling and watering) and returning to a normal situation (see Table 2).

Physical damages preventing from recovering the field production capacity are related to irrigation and drainage infrastructures, but also to transportation infrastructure. Drainage networks can be destroyed, silted or plugged, while irrigation structures may have been damaged or destroyed. Irrigation networks may be silted up; no longer able to feed by gravity; or fields may be unserviceable due to a significant increase of their elevation as a result of sedimentation.

Table 1.

FIELD DAMAGES

Low

Medium

High

Suggested ranking

Trash and debris

1

2

3

1 low or nil
2 medium scattered
3 massive impeding restart of field works

Erosion

1

4

6

1 small erosion here and there
2 medium erosion that needs some resurfacing light works
3 major erosion problems such as erased bunds, land levelling disturbances and or soil lop layer washed out that requires major intervention for restoring capacity fertility

Sedimentation

1

4

6

1 several centimetres
4 more than 10 centimetres
6 more titan 20 centimetres

Flood duration

1

4

6

1 limited to several hours,
4 flood lasted more titan one day
6 flood lasted marc than one week

Infiltration(*)

1

2


(**)
1 Clay soil
2 medium
3 high vertical hydraulic characteristic (well drained soil)

Total

Between 5 and 24

below 8 = Low damaged area
between 8 and 16 = Medium damaged area
above 16 = High damaged area

(*) Infiltration rate of upper soil layer influences the quantity of salt that contaminates the soil profile. Of course this aspect also influences the ability for remediation, highly infiltrating soil such as the sandy soils in Maldives are likely to be quickly leached and cleaned with fresh water.

(**) The ranking given here is considering the damages resulting from a small duration flood which makes sandy soils more damaged than clay soils and more impacting the shallow fresh water aquifers. For long duration floods, the damage intensity on soil is the reverse and so should be the ranking: clay soil will store much more salted water and fix much more salt than sandy soils which can be easily leached out by fresh water. [Reverse ranking for long duration floods: 1 sandy (high drainage); 2 medium (medium drainage); 3 clay-silt (low drainage)].

Table 2.

INFRASTRUCTURE CAPACITY

Low

Medium

High

Suggested ranking

Irrigation network

1

4

6

1 supply front irrigation network is operational
2 supply is interrupted but can be restore with minor interventions
3 supply is stopped and needs major interventions

Drainage network

1

4

6

1 surface drainage capacity is operational
2 surface drainage is not functional but can be restore with minor interventions
3 surface drainage is stopped and needs major interventions

Transport and access to fields

1

2

3

Access to fields and irrigation and drainage infrastructures for farming equipment and machinery is:
1 operational
2 non operational and requires short term rehabilitation works to be re-established
3 non operational and requires major long term rehabilitation works to be re-established


FARMING CAPACITY

indicates the ability of farmers to re-engage in cultivation

(see Table 3)


Farmers, extension workers, staff of agricultural services may have suffered a lot from the tsunami. Some are among the many that lost their lives, while many of survivors are in a state of chock and trauma. In the worse stricken areas it might take some time for farmers to go back to normal life and affected fields.

Furthermore draught animals, equipments and tools may be lost or damaged by the tsunami as well and need to be quickly replaced.

The program of reclamation should give full consideration to this aspect and favour as much as possible guidance to farmers with a set of practical actions on the fields, aiming at restoring the full capacity wherever it is possible. The time horizon for attaining full capacity will differ from one category to the other.

Table 3.

FARMING CAPACITY

Production means

Low

Medium

High

Suggested ranking

Household labour capacity (as fraction of pre-disaster capacity)

1

2

3

1 Capacity unchanged or slightly decreased (greater titan 90 % of pre-disaster)
2 Capacity is significantly reduced to 75-90%
3 Capacity is highly reduced to below 75%

Drought animals, equipment and tools for farming

1

2

3

1 Capacity unchanged or slightly decreased
2 Capacity is significantly reduced constraining the cropping calendar
3 Capacity is highly reduced impeding cultivation

Agricultural inputs availability'

1

2

3

1 Availability is unchanged
2 Availability is decreased
3 Availability is significantly decreased or nil

Local regional labour and equipment capacity for rehabilitation

1

2

3

1 Capacity is sufficient
2 Capacity is insufficient hut rehabilitation works can be carried out with minor external inputs
3** Capacity is nil and requires strong external inputs to complete rehabilitation works.

2. Zoning the field damages

2.1 The zoning is made firstly with consideration on the Field Damages indicators.

Important: there is no a priori methodology to give the right weighting factors of the criteria used in previous tables. The ranking of indicators and the weighting should be revised after preliminary tests on the ground.

This note provides a preliminary guesstimate about the ranking and the weights each aspect should be given. Officers in the field should revise them and report to AGLW for furtherrefinement and possibly homogenisation, if needed.

Class A “Low damaged area = below 8 ”. In this category there is no major obstacle to a rapid reclamation and salt leaching either through rainfall or through some special allocation of surface water. The restoration of capacity in this category should be monitored carefully but obtained without major intervention before the beginning of the next cropping season in April and May 2005.

Class B “Medium damaged area = between 8 and 16”. This category requires specific and significant interventions to reclaim soil, to restore land surface properties (land levelling, trash, sediment). Salt leaching would require high quantities of water either through rainfall or through some special allocation of surface water. Farmers can do most if not all the rehabilitation works themselves possibly on a “work for food program” provided that the farming capacity has not been too much reduced.

Class C “Highly damaged area = above 16”. For this category there are major obstacles to a rapid reclamation and probably the next cropping season is out of reach. In some cases, the return to cultivation might even be discussed and alternative production activities from natural resources use and management (eco-systems) may be sought for these coastal lands, while compensating current landowners and helping them reorienting/diversifying their activities on other land or other productive activities.

3. Remediation work plans

3.1. Water leaching

Leaching of salt in the upper soil profile is obtained from excess water on surface that provoke percolation below the top soil layers, flushing out of the profile salt water. This excess water results from a positive balance of [Rainfall+ irrigation- Evaporation].

In monsoon areas the rainfall is regularly greater than evaporation and the excess is thus positive. But this is not true everywhere and all the time.

The net water balance [Rainfall+ irrigation- Evaporation] should be roughly assessed for affected areas in order to estimate the leaching occurred.

A significant positive net water balance decreases the FIELD damages and for instance can pull field from Class B to Class A (but not from C to B).

3.2. Determining a set of actions

3.2.1. Class A fields

It is expected that for this situation recovery is likely to be obtained without major intervention. More likely net water balance between January and April, will be enough to flush out the salt and cultivation with normal crops can resume for the next cropping season in March and April. The existing farming system and production are able to recover quickly and no specific precaution for crops are required.

It will still be required to monitor upper soil salinity, to ensure that good conditions are met for the next cropping season and convince farmers to return to normal cultivation.

3.2. Class B fields.

For this type of situation recovery will take some more time and more specific interventions, at least one full cropping season and/or a full monsoon season will be required to recover. We cannot expect to restore full capacity before the start of the next cropping season, but farmers should be able, and encouraged, to crop at least partly their lands.

In this situation we may have to consider:

For the coming campaign and possibly the following one, farmers should receive support for seeds, inputs and advice. Their food security should also be assured by compensating them for expected reduced yields, and by providing them easier access to credit.

3.3. Class C fields

To reclaim these fields major works of rehabilitation/reclamation are required either within the field or in the near-by infrastructures.

For some of these fields, mostly very close to the sea shore, alternatives land use and production services might be sought within the context of a comprehensive agro-eco-systems rehabilitation. Abandoning land cultivation can then be a viable option if affected farmers and landowners are well compensated with alternatives productions means.

For the major part of these fields return to cultivation cannot be reached immediately and solutions must be found to allow farmers to temporary cultivate in other un/less affected lands; and to diversify land and natural resources management in order to provide them with alternative means of production and food security.

In the coming weeks specific prototypes for cropping pattern plans and production diversification will be suggested for the last two categories by FAO-AG department.

It is likely that this C class will be further subdivided into two classes:

Table 4. Summary of rehabilitation plans


Situation

CROPS farming

Agronomic support required

Class A "Low damaged area".

Return to normal expected for the next season starting in APRIL 2005

Usual crops

Monitoring salinity
Seeds and inputs supply, equipment supply if needed

Class B "Medium damaged area".

Delayed return to normal to allow enough time for specific interventions

Cultivation of salt tolerant rice varieties recommended.

Support for seeds and inputs
Compensation for reduced yields
Support for diversification.

Class C "Highly damaged area".

No return to normal this year.
Major rehabilitation works needed
Possible reorientation of land uses

Major temporary or permanent diversification of farming system

Compensation for land abandon [C2]
Support to diversification


[9] The presence of high, and/or saline, ground water tables will negatively affect the hydraulic and drainage properties.

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