Urea Briquettes Combined with a Fertilizer Blend Reduces Fertilizer Costs and Improves Yields of Irrigated Rice in Rwanda
Author | John Kayumba | |
Author | Wendt John | |
Author | Athanase Rusanganwa Cyamweshi | |
Author | Pierre Celestin Ndayisaba | |
Author | Shem Kuyah | |
Author | Ngunjiri Mercy | |
Author | Jules Rutebuka | |
Author | Leon Nsharwasi Nabahungu | |
Jurisdiction: | Rwanda | |
Date of acession | 2023-04-18T07:19:10Z | |
Date of availability | 2023-04-18T07:19:10Z | |
Date of issue | 2023-02-13 | |
Description | Grant/Award Number: SRFR 2016 Grant/Award Number: 2014/catalist2/rwa/P/028 | |
Abstract | We evaluated the yield and potential economic impact in Rwanda of replacing the standard lowland rice (Oryza sativa L.) fertilizer recommendation from the current practice of 200 kg NPK 17-17-17 ha−1 and 100 kg urea ha−1 with a basal blend of 74 kg diammonium phosphate (DAP), 57 kg potassium chloride (KCl), and deep placement of 112.5 kg urea briquettes ha−1 at 4 weeks after transplanting. Experiments were carried out in nine diverse marshlands across Rwanda in the long and short rainy seasons of 2016, with the two fertilizer treatments and a no-fertilizer control. Compared to the current practice, the urea deep placement (UDP) package increased yields by 1.08 and 0.84mt ha−1 in the respective seasons, while at the same time lowering N fertilizer rate by 15 kg ha−1. Average value to cost ratio increased from 1.89 (current recommendation) to 3.16 (UDP recommendation) and would be still greater than 2.0 at six times increase in labor cost. The cost of fertilizer recommendation (fertilizer cost plus application cost) was lower with the UDP package due to replacing 17 17-17 with a lower rate of the DAP and KCl combination. The overall average net benefit of US$300 ha−1 was substantial. Should labor cost increase by eight times compared to the current $1.52 per person-day, UDP would still provide a benefit of $150–$207 ha−1 compared to the current practice. On a national scale, converting to the UDP package recommendation would result in additional 32,000mt rice and increase farmer revenue by some US$10 million annually. | |
Sponsorship | Ministry of Agriculture and Animal Resources, Rwanda International Fertilizer Development Center | |
Citation | Kayumba, J., Wendt, J., Cyamweshi, A. R., Ndayisaba, P. C., Kuyah, S., Ngunjiri, M., Rutebuka, J., & Nabahungu, L. N. (2023). Urea briquettes combined with a fertilizer blend reduces fertilizer costs and improves yields of irrigated rice in Rwanda. Agronomy Journal, 1–12. https://doi.org/10.1002/agj2.21324 | |
URL | https://hub.ifdc.org/handle/20.500.14297/2092 | |
Language | en_US | |
Subject | Greenhouse gas emissions | |
Subject | Fertilizers | |
Title | Urea Briquettes Combined with a Fertilizer Blend Reduces Fertilizer Costs and Improves Yields of Irrigated Rice in Rwanda | |
Type | Article |
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