Yahoo – AFP,
Maude Brulard, 29 April 2015
![]() |
A worker
sorts potatoes before packaging them at the Salty Potato Farm,
in Den Horn,
Netherlands (AFP Photo/Emmanuel Dunand)
|
Den Hoorn
(Netherlands) (AFP) - A small field on an island off the Netherlands' northern
coast promises one answer to the problem of how to feed the world's
ever-growing population: potatoes and other crops that grow in saltwater.
Every day,
swathes of farmland somewhere in the world become unusable because of salty
soil, but farmers on windswept Texel are finding solutions using traditional
methods.
The team
headed by farmer Mark van Rijsselberghe has planted around 30 types of potato
and their approach is simple: anything that dies in the saline environment is
abandoned, and anything that lives "we try to follow up on," said Van
Rijsselberghe. "It's faster."
![]() |
Dutch
farmer Mark van Rijsselberghe,
who launched the Salty Potato Farm
(AFP
Photo/Emmanuel Dunand)
|
The plants
are irrigated using pumps that manage water down to the drop, so the plant and
soil salinity can be accurately measured and the effect of "sweet"
rainwater taken into account.
Van
Rijsselberghe, 60, started the "Salty Potato Farm" around 10 years
ago in the hope of helping the world's malnourished.
The team,
supported by Amsterdam University, uses neither genetically modified organisms
nor laboratories in their quest for food that grows in salty environments.
With more
than 5,000 varieties, the potato is the world's fourth most popular food crop,
according to the United Nations' Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO).
Plants
whose ancestors grew near or on the sea, but have moved inland with human
populations, are likely still to have the necessary genes.
"It could
be a hundred, it could be 1,000 years ago, they still are capable of coping
with saline surroundings," said Van Rijsselberghe.
Food
security
![]() |
A worker
sorts potatoes before packaging
them at the Salty Potato Farm in Den Horn,
in
the Netherlands (AFP Photo/
Emmanuel Dunand)
|
The
bespectacled farmer jokes that in a country where much of the land lies below
sea level, "we are so afraid of the sea that until 10 years ago we didn't
dare to do anything with sea water and growing plants".
The world
loses around 2,000 hectares (just under 5,000 acres) of agricultural land a day
to salt-induced degradation in 75 countries, caused by bad or absent
irrigation, according to the UN's Institute for Water, Environment and Health.
The problem
today affects an area the size of France -- about 62 million hectares or 20
percent of the world's irrigated lands, up from 45 million hectares in the
early 1990s.
Solutions
to make the land cultivable once more are too expensive for most of the areas,
including the basin of the Yellow River in China, the Euphrates in Syria and
Iraq or the Indus Valley in Pakistan.
![]() |
A testing
field used by the Salty Potato
Farm project to experiment with crops
(AFP
Photo/Emmanuel Dunand)
|
These
"salt" potatoes could transform the lives of thousands of farmers in
affected regions and, in the long term, those of around 250 million people who
live on salt-afflicted soil.
The potato
was introduced to Europe from Peru in the 16th century and became popular
because of its ability to feed people during the continent's frequent famines.
However,
over-reliance on the crop was potentially disastrous, with a blight leading to
the devastating 19th-century Irish potato famine.
Today,
about 800 million people in the world are under-nourished, according to the
FAO, with salt degradation threatening 10 percent of the global cereal crop.
Sweet
taste not price
The
potatoes grown here taste sweeter than those grown on normal land, because the
plant produces more sugars to compensate for the salty environment.
![]() |
Packaged
pototoes at the Salty Potato
Farm (AFP Photo/Emmanuel Dunand)
|
But the
price of the potatoes is for now prohibitive, with one kilo (around two pounds)
selling for five euros (just over $5), compared to less than a euro for the
same amount of "normal" potatoes.
"We
grow around 30,000 kilos per hectare, a farmer with good conditions around
60,000 kilos," said Robin Konijn, the farm's financial director.
Countries
ranging from Egypt to Bangladesh and India have already asked for advice on
planting their own salt-proof crops.
The team is
also soon to start trying to cultivate potatoes in the salty wetlands of the
Camargue in the south of France -- the so-called "Miss Mignon"
(French for "Miss Cutie Pie").
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