A senior Chinese official has assured the public of sufficient
food supplies amid rising concerns over the potential impact of
developing biofuel from grains.
Zhu Zhigang, vice-minister of finance, said on Saturday that
biofuel and biochemistry must only be developed on the basis of
guaranteeing China's food supplies first.
He made the comments as grain prices have risen particularly for
corn the main raw material for ethanol a crude oil substitute and
an environment-friendly energy.
Ethanol has been the main biofuel produced in China with output
hitting 1.02 million tons last year -- and corn accounting for 76
percent of the raw material. The others are wheat and sorghum.
Zhai Huqu, president of the Chinese Academy of Agricultural
Sciences, earlier said China cannot afford using grain for
developing energy.
"We can do research on using corn and other grains as an energy
substitute but it cannot be industrialized," Zhai was quoted as
saying by Xinhua News Agency.
"It will be a disaster for us if we depend on a huge amount of
corn and other grains for energy."
Zhu also stressed that grain is crucially important to China,
since the country's arable land is insufficient for a population of
1.3 billion.
Only when the supply of grain exceeds demand, then part of it
should be processed into biofuel.
Such a move balances supply and demand, and protects a farmer's
enthusiasm for crop growing, he said.
"China will carefully evaluate the grain consumption of the
biofuel project and its influence on the food chain," Zhu was
quoted as saying by China News Service.
"The government will impose strict controls on any biofuel
project using grain as the raw material."
The senior official said the government will encourage the use
of non-grain agricultural and forestry plants for developing
biofuel.
For biofuel projects that use agricultural plants and wastes,
the government will require them to build a raw material production
base, which must use uncultivated land instead of arable land.
The potential resources are abundant. Official statistics showed
that China has nearly 2 billion mu (133 million hectares) of
wasteland that is suitable for growing agricultural and forestry
products.
China also produces 600 million tons of farming and forestry
wastes such as stalks.
(China Daily December 12, 2006)