The amount of land dedicated to grain production is expected to
continue shrinking in the years ahead but it will still have to
produce a minimum of 500 million tons needed to feed China in
2010.
The estimate of China's future grain need was revealed by the
Ministry of Agriculture yesterday, as it unveiled the National
Agricultural and Rural Economic Development Program for the 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-10).
"We estimate that the country will need at least 500 million
tons of grain in 2010," said Yang Jian, director of the ministry's
Development Planning Department and one of the program's chief
designers.
"We must reserve at least 103.33 million hectares for that
output," he told China Daily.
Although it should be possible to produce 500 million tons of
grain, Yang warned that urbanization, plus efforts to set land
aside for forest and grassland reserves, would mean the amount of
arable land would irreversibly shrink in the coming years.
The ministry predicts that during the 11th Five-Year Plan
period, the total grain-producing land area will decrease by 0.18
percent annually. Arable land has already shrunk by 8 million
hectares between 1999 and 2005, the Ministry of Land and Resources
said in March.
China used 104.28 million hectares of arable land to produce 484
million tons of grain last year, 14.55 million tons more than the
previous year, according to Ministry of Agriculture statistics.
In its development program, the ministry reiterated the nation's
policy of relying on domestic efforts to guarantee food security,
stressing there must be a "steady growth" in the production of
grain and other major farm produce.
Global grain transactions stand around 200 million tons a year,
less than half of China's annual demands, according to Yang.
"China is a responsible country. If we import too much grain,
there will be a drastic hike in grain prices in the world market,
which will threaten the interests of other importers," he said.
To maintain domestic grain supply, the ministry's 11th Five-Year
Plan prescribes that arable land must be strictly protected,
especially in major grain producing counties and State farms, where
national high-quality grain production projects, as well as "fine
seed," "plant protection" and "fertile soil" projects will be
implemented.
Farming technology must also be extended to increase the
per-unit yield, and high-yielding "super rice" strains should be
planted in more areas.
The program also specifies requirements for animal and plant
disease and epidemic control, and for stepping up standardization
in agricultural production to improve food quality and safety.
(China Daily August 4, 2006)