New Zealand imports from four main countries, she said.
“Thailand, Australia, Vietnam and India, but because these countries are close to equators, they’ve been hammered by climate change impact recently.
“And India, particularly, is the most populous country in the world with 1.4 billion, but they are looking to add maybe 250 million people over the next 25 years, so they will need to meet the domestic demand more and more.”
In some parts of Asia, it has become too hot to successfully grow rice, she said.
“And also the rising sea level, some rice fields have had too much salinity in the water, and ironically, for NZ it’s becoming warmer, so it’s becoming more and more suitable to grow crops like rice.”
It is also a zero-waste crop, she said.
“You could make a house out of it, clothing, dairy materials, everything from horticulture, it was used as a mulch or ropes to carry like a backpack, or even a bag to transport rice was made out of rice straw.
“So, it has culturally significant meaning to me.”
Her small two-metre by two-metre paddy yielded a decent harvest last year, she said.
And similar rice-growing experiments are going on in Kaiwaka, the Earthsong Eco-Village in Auckland and northern Waikato.
In Japanese culture, rice is a revered crop, she said.
“We have a saying in Japan that one single grain of rice has 88 gods dwelling in it, and it’s really precious, so you don’t waste it.
“And once you start growing rice, you really realise how precious it is, so you won’t waste a grain.”
Fukuda has just bought a hand-operated thresher with a grant she received from the Nelson City Council and plans to run workshops about what her experiments in growing rice have taught her.
- Here Now, presented by RNZ’s Kadambari Gladding, is about the journeys people make to NZ, their identities and perspectives, all of which shape their lives here.
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