The Ministry of Agriculture (MOA) warned Friday the
lingering drought will damage the year's summer crop output, but
analysts say the country's grain crop prices won't be much
affected.
Nearly 15 million hectares of arable land have been
affected by the drought triggered by high temperatures and strong
winds, latest figures from the State Flood Control and Drought
Relief Headquarters revealed.
Drought has affected some part of China every day
since the beginning of the year. Under the impact of global
warming, the situation is likely to further deteriorate in the
foreseeable future.
Currently, 25 percent more Chinese land is affected by
drought than the average in previous years.
"Summer crops are in a crunch situation. If the
drought continues in wheat producing areas, China will be unable to
reach its summer crop targets," said a MOA statement.
A preliminary survey by the Wheat Chapter of the China
National Association of Grain Crops in worst-stricken Hebei
Province projects lower wheat output, the staple of summer
crops.
"The decline will not seriously affect the year's
grain reserve and supply. But the official forecast has not yet
been released," an agency spokeswoman told Xinhua by phone, adding
that similar surveys are under way in other drought-hit
regions.
The drought started in northern China in late April
and spread to Shanxi, Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, Xinjiang, Gansu,
Hubei, Henan, Liaoning, Chongqing, Sichuan and Yunnan.
China's wheat output is
expected to go down by 2.53 percent year-on-year to 101.8 million
tons even if the weather turns favorable, said the China National
Grain and Oils Information Center in its monthly update in
May.
There will be no rainfall in the next three days in
northern China and the Huanghe and Huaihe River Valleys where
drought has wrought havoc, according to a Friday forecast by the
China Meteorological Administration.
Given the government's massive grain crop reserve,
analysts said the drop won't result in a grain shortfall or drastic
price hikes.
Summer crops normally make up 20 percent of China's
annual grain output which has grown for three straight years since
2003 to 497.46 million tons last year, up 2.8 percent or 13.44
million tons from 2005.
With the harvesting of summer crops only a month away,
the Ministry of Agriculture has urged governments in
drought-stricken areas to mobilize local farmers to fight against
the extreme weather which has left nine million people and 7
million livestock short of drinking water.
A daily average of more than 1.2 million farmers in
Henan were mobilized in the first half of May, using 276,000
electrical pumps to irrigate land.
The Hebei provincial government has started to ration
its underground water supply to meet production and domestic
demand.
(Xinhua News Agency May 19, 2007)
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