Isan farmers turn to growing maize

Isan farmers turn to growing maize

Grisada Boonrach, chairman of the Royal Initiative Discovery Institute, talks to a staff member from Charoen Pokphand Produce at a maize field demonstration plot in Rong Kham district in Kalasin. (Photo: The Royal Initiative Discovery Institute)
Grisada Boonrach, chairman of the Royal Initiative Discovery Institute, talks to a staff member from Charoen Pokphand Produce at a maize field demonstration plot in Rong Kham district in Kalasin. (Photo: The Royal Initiative Discovery Institute)

The Royal Initiative Discovery Institute is supporting about 2,000 rice growers in three northeastern provinces to grow maize following their rice harvest, in a pilot project aimed at helping them supplement their income in the coming dry season.

Maize is used as a primary grain in cattle feed production. Prices are rising due to a shortage in the global supply of grain linked to the Russia-Ukraine war, said Grisada Boonrach, chairman of the institute.

Currently, Thailand can produce only about 4 million tonnes of maize per year, while actual demand is more than 8 million tonnes a year, he said.

Normally rice farmers continue growing off-season rice in the dry season immediately after they have harvested their seasonal crop, a practice that usually comes with a high risk of water shortages and damage to the new crop, he said.

Unlike growing off-season rice, growing maize in the dry season will offer a better opportunity to succeed as growing maize requires less water than rice, he said.

In this pilot phase, the institute is working together with rice growers in Kalasin, Khon Kaen, and Udon Thani as well as with organisations under the Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives, he said.

The only private partner in this project at this early stage is Charoen Pokphand Produce (CPP) Co which has agreed to provide financial support to rice growers without interest, and promise to buy the product at a guaranteed price of 8.50 baht per kilogramme.

A total of 2,296 farmers have applied, he said.



Do you like the content of this article?
COMMENT (1)

How Vietnam is trying to stop rice warming the planet

CAN THO, Vietnam: As a child, Dong Van Canh watched while the rice fields of Vietnam's Mekong Delta were set alight to make way for the next crop, blackening the sky and flooding the air with potent greenhouse gases.

09:45

SCBAM eyes 3-5% growth in assets

SCB Asset Management (SCBAM) aims to grow its assets under management (AUM) by 3-5% this year from 1.6 trillion baht recorded in 2022.

09:03

SPCG expects solar panel revenue to reach B1bn

Costly electricity bills are expected to cause more households and businesses to use renewable energy by installing rooftop solar panels, says SET-listed SPCG, a pioneer in solar farm development in Thailand.

08:04