Off the wire
Injuries the price for Madrid and Barca weekend wins  • Chinese surgeons complete regenerative cartilage transplant  • Rwanda police intercept 12 Burundians in suspected human trafficking  • Weather forecast for world cities -- Jan. 23  • Weather forecast for major Chinese cities, regions -- Jan. 23  • Truck transporting Cambodian garment workers overturns, injuring 25  • Anthrax kills 2 people in western Zambia, 67 affected  • Iran says Astana meeting crucial to maintain truce in Syria: spokesman  • 3 killed as heavy rains pound Kigali  • UAE's Emirates Airline to launch new route to U.S.  
You are here:   Home

China steps up farmland protection as grain output falls

Xinhua, January 23, 2017 Adjust font size:

China vowed to strengthen farmland protection on Monday as urbanization increased pressure on grain supplies.

Efforts must be made to stabilize farmland area and improve its quality to ensure grain self-sufficiency and food security, according to a document released by the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council.

China aims to retain at least 124.33 million hectares of arable land in 2020, with no less than 103.1 million hectares of permanent farmland and at least 53.3 million hectares of high-quality farmland, the document said.

China had 133.3 million hectares of arable land at the end of 2015, official data showed. The government has set a warning level of 120 million hectares.

This level must not be breached, and the use of arable land for construction will be strictly controlled, the document noted.

It said that the arable land should be protected "the way we protect pandas."

The move came as China's grain output fell 0.8 percent year on year to 616.2 million tonnes in 2016 after 12 years of consecutive growth.

Despite a bumper grain harvest in 2015, China still had a shortfall of about 20 million tonnes in the amount of grain it produced and consumed, according to official calculations.

As industrialization and urbanization advanced, arable land reserves kept shrinking and the difficulty of restoring farmland was rising, according to Monday's document.

It reiterated the stance of sticking to the strictest rules of protecting farmland and using land economically.

The document also demanded more efforts to replenish as much arable land currently occupied by non-agricultural construction. Endi