The devastating floods and drought will not affect the country's
grain output, officials and experts said yesterday.
In fact, grain production is expected to remain stable in the
coming years, which means the country doesn't have to import more.
More imports could push up prices in the international market
significantly and make consumers back home pay more too.
Despite the drought and heavy rains that have hit many provinces
this year, autumn grain output is expected to more or less meet the
target, said Hu Biliang, a researcher with the Rural Development
Institute of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
In fact, summer grain output rose for the fourth consecutive
year to reach 115.34 million tons, according to official data.
China's grain imports have been exceeding its exports since
2003, raising concerns that it could destabilize global grain
prices.
Ministry of Agriculture's senior official Hu Yuankun said last
week that China will depend mainly on domestic supply to meet its
demand. It will make "proper" use of the international market to
meet the domestic demand for processing and other industrial uses,
he said at a forum.
State Grain Administration official Lu Jingbo, too, said China
has ample stock of grain, and that supply and demand has become
relatively balanced.
Last year, China's grain output reached 497.45 million tons,
while its demand was estimated at 507.5 million tons, a gap of 10
million tons, or just 2 percent of its annual output.
The central government has granted more subsidies to farmers
within the framework of the World Trade Organization. This, coupled
with the rising grain prices, has encouraged farmers to raise their
yield, Hu said.
In the coming years, China will face additional pressure because
the area of its cultivable land is shrinking as a result of
urbanization, Hu said. Another challenge is that the output
capacity of more than 60 percent of China's farmland is
diminishing.
Director of Chinese Academy of Sciences' Center for Chinese
Agricultural Policy Huang Jikun said China has improved its
technical expertise to raise its per unit production to make up for
the loss.
"That will ensure that China's grain imports and exports remain
roughly balanced in the coming years," he said.
By 2015, China has to import corns to meet 15 percent of its
demand, Huang said. But the exports of rice and wheat will increase
by that time to balance the country's overall grain trade.
(China Daily August 8, 2007)