Off the wire
News Analysis: U.S. efforts to ease tension with LatAm countries not to produce instant results  • Data retention laws expected to be passed in Australia  • Spotlight: Moment of truth draws near for Iran nuclear deal  • 1st LD: Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew's condition worsens  • Langkawi International Maritime and Aerospace Exhibition kicks off in Malaysia  • Urgent: Lee Kuan Yew's condition worsens: gov't  • Sri Lanka unveils proposals for constitutional reforms  • Xinhua Asia-Pacific news summary at 0600 GMT, March 17  • 2nd LD Writethru-China Focus: China's Jan.-Feb. FDI jumps 17 pct  • China calls Sri Lanka to protect interests of investors over suspended port project  
You are here:   Home

Drought, flood threaten China's granary

Xinhua, March 17, 2015 Adjust font size:

China's largest grain producer, Heilongjiang Province, is facing dual drought and flood challenges during this year's spring harvest, according to experts.

Ten counties and cities in the province's west are suffering a lack of rain, while 29 others in the east and north are threatened by flood, meteorology experts said at a consultation meeting on flood control and drought relief held by the provincial government on Monday.

Experts predicted the spring drought in the west may become the worst for the region in the past five years. On the contrary, the soil in the northern and eastern areas are excessively wet.

According to data from the provincial water resources department, the rainfall since November 2014 has been 40 percent more than that recorded during the same period in previous years.

In 2014, grain output in Heilongjiang, located in China's northeast,totaled 62.4 billion kg, accounting for around 10 percent of the country's total. The province contributed to 46.1 percent of the country's grain output increase in the year. Endi