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Climate-Smart Rice Farming Cuts Emissions in Bangladesh

New research from a multi-institutional team identifies specific rice varieties and modified fertilizer use as key methods for reducing greenhouse gas emissions from rice cultivation in Bangladesh without sacrificing crop yields. The findings, published in the journal Science of The Total Environment, are based on field trials conducted by the Bangladesh Rice Research Institute (BRRI), International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), International Fertiliser Development Center (IFDC), and Japan’s National Agriculture and Food Research Organisation (NARO).
Practical climate-smart strategies
The study found that selecting the right rice variety was one of the most effective ways to lower methane emissions. It identified BRRI dhan67 and BRRI hybrid dhan3 as climate-smart choices. During the dry seasons, BRRI dhan67 reduced methane emissions by 9 to 14 percent compared to other varieties, while BRRI hybrid dhan3 reduced emissions by 6 percent to 14 percent. The Global Warming Potential (GWP) was reduced by 10 to 13 percent with BRRI dhan67 and 8 to 11 percent with BRRI hybrid dhan3.
Meanwhile, during the wet season, BRRI dhan75 and BRRI hybrid dhan6 reduced methane emissions by approximately 7 to 14 percent compared to BRRI dhan87 and BRRI dhan90. When it came to inputs, the study found that reducing nitrogen fertiliser by 20 percent lowered methane emissions by 6 percent and nitrous oxide by 17 percent. Grain yields remained stable with this reduction.
Soil influence
The study also evaluated the role of soil salinity, as a significant area of Bangladesh’s cultivable land is coastal saline soil. Coastal saline soil was found to significantly reduce overall GWP by 9 percent compared to non-saline soil but produced slightly less methane. This was likely due to microbial inhibition under high salt concentrations.
However, non-saline soils proved to be better for crop productivity, resulting in 11 percent more yield and 13 percent higher total nitrogen uptake compared to the coastal saline soils.
The research demonstrated that simple and scalable interventions could make rice cultivation more sustainable. For rice-growing delta regions like Bangladesh, these findings offer a pragmatic roadmap for reducing agriculture’s carbon footprint without compromising food security.
Source: IndexBox Market Intelligence Platform
https://www.indexbox.io/blog/climate-smart-rice-farming-cuts-emissions-in-bangladesh/Published Date: December 2, 2025