Off the wire
Roundup: Singapore stocks end down 0.36 pct  • China's all provincial regions reach pollutants emission cut target  • Chinese tourists to Zimbabwe sees 62 pct jump in Q1  • China Focus: China fine-tunes growth trajectory, quality trumping speed  • Chinese trade official visits destructed heritage sites in Nepal  • China encourages community consultation to solve disputes  • Iceland's wage index records 2.3 pct increase in June  • Feature: Facebook: A blessing or a curse for Vietnam's growing number of users?  • Myanmar's Kokang region allowed to hold general election: official  • Turkish authorities identify suicide attacker linked to IS  
You are here:   Home

China Headlines: China sees record summer grain output, but concerns remain

Xinhua, July 22, 2015 Adjust font size:

China's yields of summer grain reached a record high in 2015 after 11 straight years of increase, but problems are still clouding the world's most populous country.

The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said last week that the country's summer grain output hit 141.07 million tonnes this year, up 3.3 percent from that of 2014.

China's summer grain crops, mainly wheat and early-season rice, usually account for about 25 percent of its annual grain output. Autumn grain crops, which include corn and middle- and late-season rice, account for the remaining 75 percent.

"The bumper harvest was a result of the central government's continued support for grain production and full capitalization on science and technology," said NBS senior statistician Hou Rui.

In the context of global grain output reduction and China's economic restructuring, 12 years of bumper harvest has provided a solid foundation to China's food security and sustainable development of agriculture, said Li Guoxiang, a researcher of Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

But problems remain. The first is inadequate grain storage capacity.

Harvest season is supposed to be a good time for farmers but not for Tong Qiguo, a 53-year-old farmer from Yichang City of central China's Hubei Province.

He reaped 160,000 kg of wheat from his 400-mu (around 27 hectares) farm, but failed to find places to store them like previous five years.

"Without storage facilities, harvest means nothing," he complained.

About 35 million tonnes of grain are lost or wasted in China every year in the course of storage, transportation and processing.

The country is striving to build more grain-storage facilities and help farmers improve storage conditions. Nevertheless, national grain stocks have hit a new high due to the bumper harvests and increasing imports, said Chen Xiwen, deputy head of the central agricultural work leading team.

Import of cereals and flour in the first six months of this year jumped 60 percent year on year to a record 16.29 million tonnes, latest customs statistics showed.

Li Guoxiang attributed the rise in overall imports to relatively lower global grain prices and a diversified demand of grains at home.

Ye Xingqing, head of the agricultural economy department of the Development Research Center under the State Council, said China's raising the minimum purchasing price for grain has made many grain products more expensive than in many other countries.

As cheaper rice imported from overseas pinches profits, many small and medium-sized grain enterprises are facing difficulties, he said.

China has 9 percent of the world's arable land and 6.5 percent of its fresh water resources, producing a quarter of the world's grain and feeding nearly one-fifth of the world's population.

It's not an easy task. China's arable land is shrinking amid the urbanization drive. It has a "red-line" guarantee that the amount of land dedicated to arable farming shall never shrink to less than 120 million hectares.

Overuse of water and chemical fertilizers are another concern.

Liu Lifang, a farmer from Tanghe County of China's Henan Province, has reduced chemical fertilizer use after authorities began providing free soil testing for 190 million farmers annually since 2005.

"The experts gave us fertilizer recommendations based on the results," Liu said, adding that such method has cut down costs, boosted grain output, improved fertilizer efficiency and reduced pollution.

However, chemical fertilizer use still hit 59 million tonnes in 2013. The method is expected to be applied among more Chinese farmers.

DEVELOPING MODERN AGRICULTURE

Ye Xingqing said the key to cope with the challenges lie in promoting new models of agriculture and improving productivity.

In Henan, Zhonghe Group installed advanced irrigation facilities in a large cropland, which can save 70 percent of electricity, 50 percent of water and 90 percent labor compared with traditional methods.

"Using it to irrigate a 1,000-mu field of wheat only needs three farmers to work within an hour," said Wang Wenming, a staff from the company. "That's the power of modern agriculture."

In China, a farmer can plant around seven mu of cropland on average, while a farmer can plant hundreds mu in Europe and even tens of thousands mu in the U.S. with help of agricultural machinery, said Zheng Xinli, deputy director of the China Center for International Economic Exchanges.

The "No.1 Central Document", the first major policy document of each year released by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and the State Council, stressed in February that the central government will strive to transform the development mode of agriculture and boost policies that benefit farmers.

In the long run, the goal of modern agriculture development lies in high efficiency, product safety, resource saving and environment friendliness, said Qin Fu, a researcher of Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences. Endi