LAOAG CITY—Small farmers in rain-fed farmlands of Ilocos Norte will now have a chance to grow high-value crops even during summer by harnessing the power of the sun as alternative energy.
Tapping the sun's energy is the new craze at Brgy. Lang-ayan in
Currimao, Ilocos Norte, where a solar-powered irrigation system with at least
four solar panels was installed near a communal food garden where its residents
can grow off-season fruits and vegetables.
Funded by the province’s share from the tobacco excise tax, there
are four units of this kind of small-scale irrigation project being pilot
tested in the second district of Ilocos Norte where water is scarce during the
summer months of March to May or even longer due to prolonged El Niño
phenomenon.
The other units are located in the rural Barangays of Camguidan
and Camandingan in Batac City and Barbar, Pinili town.
The solar-powered irrigation system worth PHP486,250 per unit may
be a bit costly for small farmers but in the long run, it is more beneficial to
them because they will no longer spend on fuel to irrigate their farmlands,
provincial agriculturist Norma Lagmay said.
Each mini-type unit can irrigate around 3-5 hectares of
high-value crops while the bigger ones can irrigate 10-15 hectares, Lagmay disclosed.
“Here is to give our farmers an alternative for them to
appreciate nature,” Lagmay noted, citing Ilocos Norte’s erratic weather
condition over the past few years requiring farmers to adopt the best
technology suited for them.
With the expected prolonged drought in the province, the
provincial agriculturist reported that more solar-powered irrigation system
projects are expected to be installed in the province's non-irrigated farmlands
to promote food security.
Farmer-engineer John Lei Ganiron of Ben-agan, Batac City said the
solar-powered irrigation system is a worthy investment for farmers.
“When there is water. We can plant anything,” he said. (Leilanie G. Adriano)
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