"Welcome to my cotton farm, dear friend" Li Jianmin cheered,
opened his arms and hugged the reporter from China.org.cn. Walking
through the small path with him yesterday, he was very glad to say:
"this year, I will also have a harvest."
He looked over his 20 mu (15 mu = 1 hectare) cotton fields and the
happiness appeared on his face.
There are also another 20 farmers in Yinxia County under Korla,
the capital of the Bayinguoleng Mongolian Autonomous Prefecture in
northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region and also the
largest prefecture in China.
Li told China.org.cn that at the end of this year, he is going
to buy a small truck and a new mobile phone.
He said: "I really want to give my thanks to the local
government. It organizes us together, teach us the advanced
technology, and help us to sell the colored cotton. I think this
year I can earn at least 20,000 yuan (US$2,500)."
He also excitedly indicated that he has become a small "boss".
In fact, he employed 3 persons to pick up the cotton.
"Each one can pick up about 25 kg cotton from 8:00 AM to 19 PM,
including myself. It is really a heavy work. My employees and I
work for the same hours and also have the same food. In Xinjiang,
most the picking-cotton workers are from China's central provinces.
When the season comes to an end, they will go back" he told
China.org.cn.
He was also planning to extend his fields from 20 mu to 25
mu.
"I will ask the local government for some necessary information.
If the market is good, I will do it" he smiled.
This is only one of so many common cotton farmers in Xinjiang.
Actually, Xinjiang as a leading cotton producer of China reaped
44,000 tons of colored cotton a year, accounting for 95 percent of
the national total or 30 percent of the world's total.
Xinjiang now grows approximately 46,700 hectares of colored
cotton, making the region the largest colored cotton production
base in the world, according to the local officials.
Xinjiang has developed seven colored cotton strains including
brown and green cotton. Researchers with the Xinjiang Genetically
Modified Colored Cotton Institute had been working with the
hereditary Science Institute of the Chinese Academy of Sciences to
produce red, blue and black cotton by transferring an external
colored gene into naturally grown white cotton with sophisticated
genetic engineering technology.
Global colored cotton output reached up to 160,000 tons last
year and the sales of cotton yarn rose by over 300 times as
compared with 2000.
It is estimated that colored cotton output will make up anywhere
around 30 percent of world's total cotton in the next three
decades.
(China.org.cn by Staff Reporter Wang Ke September 28, 2006)