UBAY, BOHOL — The beginning of the wet season within the nation has been formally declared however farmers in Bohol province are nonetheless ready for rains to pour of their parched rice fields.
Reynaldo Auza, a 77-year-old farmer from Barangay San Carlos in Talibon city, has been praying for rain.
“There was a drizzle final week nevertheless it was too quick for the water to seep by the soil,” he instructed the Inquirer.
Auza and different farmers have been apprehensive about the place to get water as a result of the water within the Talibon Small Reservoir Irrigation has dropped to a crucial degree.
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The scenario is analogous in different dams in Bohol the place water is scarce.
The Malinao Dam in Pilar city, the oldest water reservoir within the province, is in need of water. It provides 4,740 hectares of rice fields within the cities of Pilar, Alicia, Ubay, San Miguel, and Dagohoy.
The Capayas Dam in Ubay city which offers water to 1,160 ha of rice fields has water under its regular working degree.
The Bayongan Dam within the city of San Miguel can also be working out of water.
Farmers have been complaining concerning the lack of rain that has affected not less than 533.5 ha of rice fields in Bohol, thought of the rice bowl of the Central Visayas area.
Of not less than 47,000 ha of rice fields in Bohol, 24,000 ha are irrigated by dams, small water catchments and diversionary canals. The remainder depend on rain.
Appearing provincial agriculturist Larry Pamugas mentioned the El Niño climate phenomenon’s injury to agriculture and fisheries has reached P459 million in 41 of 47 cities and one metropolis within the province.
State of calamity
Bohol has been underneath a state of calamity as a result of affect of the extended dry spell and drought since Might 21.
As a result of water scarcity, the provincial authorities had licensed cloud seeding operations beginning June 11 regardless of an objection from Board Member Mimi Boniel.
In a privilege speech final week, Boniel urged the provincial authorities to cease the operations due to the onset of the wet season.
Nevertheless, Pamugas and the Bohol Cloud Seeding Process Drive mentioned the current rains in Bohol weren’t sufficient to save lots of farms.
“Primarily based on our current remark and information from the Nationwide Irrigation Administration, [the water is] not sufficient,” Pamugas mentioned.
He mentioned farmlands weren’t the one ones affected by the dearth of rainfall as its affect was additionally felt by livestock, poultry, and inland fishery companies within the province.
In keeping with Pamugas, heavy rains are additionally vital to maintain Bohol’s 59,558 ha of forestland and its 16 watersheds.
When the province skilled drought in 2016, Pamugas mentioned they needed to resort to cloud seeding to convey aid to El Niño-stricken areas and scale back agriculture injury and crop losses.
Pamugas mentioned cloud seeding was a part of interventions to assist restore water ranges and help farmers and communities depending on these sources.