Food Security Seeks
Salvation in Eco-Farming
By staff reporter LU RUCAI,
China Today
The following is an
interview on food security with Jiang Gaoming, a research fellow
with the
Institute of Botany
under the Chinese Academy of Sciences. Prof. Jiang specializes in
grain production and food safety, and has established an
experimental eco-farm in his home village, Jiangjiazhuang in
Shandong's Pingyi County.
Increased Grain Production Rests on Four
Factors
CT: How is it China can feed 1.3
billion population with only 120 million hectares of arable
land?
Jiang: It's true that
using only 7 percent of the world's arable land and 5 percent of
global fresh water resources,
China has managed to feed 22 percent of
the world's population. Other feats are worth mentioning: the
decade from
1982 to 1991 saw China
grow into the world's largest grain producer; its output increased
by 8 percent annually.
From 2004 to 2008, its grain yield
continued to rise somewhat, and an increase is also expected for
this year.
I think four reasons account for this
success. The first is an effective policy. The household farmland
contract
responsibility system we have
implemented since 1978 has boosted grain yields by leaps and
bounds. This policy
has defined a farmer's
obligation to his land and greatly motivated personal initiative.
By 1984, China's grain output
was exceeding 400
billion kilograms, or 100 billion kilograms more than in 1978. At
the 1984 conference of the
Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations, the Chinese government declared that the country
had
"basically solved its food
problem."
Secondly, the strength of science and
technology belongs in the success equation. Seeds, water
conservancy and
other basic farmland construction have
played an indispensable role in output increase. And, of course,
chemical
fertilizers are also a
major player; but we recognize now that most of them can be
replaced by organic fertilizers.
Feces of many animal
farms around the country are left untreated and unused, and are
polluting our environment.
The government should do something to
change this situation.
Human factors also count. I can say
almost for sure that Chinese farmers are the most hardworking in
the world,
and the intensive cultivation methods of
China and India were, and still are, the most advanced. Though the
right
policies can motivate them, it all
depends on the farmers' hard work to make good policies
operational, realize yield breakthroughs, and guarantee food supplies for billions
of people.
Finally, there is climate change. A
higher content of carbon dioxide in the air and a warmer climate
have, in a way, contributed to higher yields. But these changes
also threaten grain production. For example, a warmer
climate
encourages pests and increases the
difficulty of control. Therefore, the role of climate change in
grain yield rise is controversial.
Among all these factors, farmland and
the people working it are the most pivotal. So the quantity of
arable land
must be held constant and farmers must
keep up the hard work to guarantee food security.
Two Pressures on
Food Security
CT: Compared to decades ago, are
there any changes in farmers' enthusiasm for growing grain
crops?
Jiang: Changes are
evident. Today's rural inhabitants don't like to take on farming,
because of the great urban-rural
income disparity associated with that
choice of occupation. If they leave their villages to work in
cities, their monthly
income equals at least
half a year spent farming. In a big grain-producing province such
as Shandong, some farmers planted poplar trees in their fields
before they went to urban centers, so that when they return a few
years later they
are able to fell the trees and sell them
as timber. The government cannot tie them to their fields and force
them to
farm; the market has
more say in these matters. I've made a rough calculation. The
income disparity between urban wageearners and farmers has enlarged to 44 times its
original difference since the late 1970s, while grain prices have
increased by less than five fold. This is to say that back then
farmers could support their families by farming and now
they can't. This explains the phenomenon
that only the elderly, children and the handicapped are left at
home tending family plots while able-bodied members all go to
cities. This situation will affect both grain output and
quality.
CT: What do you think will
encourage farmers to stick to farming?
Jiang: Farming must be
made into a profession that attracts villagers and trains farmers
in agricultural expertise.
Policy support is a must to bring about
this revolution in attitude and values. Farmers should be allowed a
profit
margin that is comparable to, or even
higher than, that of a migrant's city wages.
CT: Aside from a somewhat
crippled farming initiative, is there any other pressure on China's
food security?
Jiang: Yes, grain
imports from the United States and other countries. American
soybean, for example, currently
sells at RMB 1.6-1.8
per kg on the Chinese market, while our own produce goes for RMB
3.0. What if we relied
totally on the cheaper
American supply? The result would be our dependence on American
sources, and with our
own production wiped out, you can bet
the import will be cheap no longer. The final indignity is that
China will have
no grounds to bargain on import
prices.
Though relevant government departments
have realized the importance of food security, many people still
place their
hopes of securing
grain on the international market to meet domestic demand. Then the
problem won't be the
adequacy of supply, but the grain
monopoly held by large transnational companies. Like petroleum,
food is also a
limited resource. Once
China raises its level of dependency on foreign supply, it will be
at the mercy of others.
Follow the Money and Change the
Rewards
CT: Do you think the current farming
method can guarantee our future food security?
Jiang: Over the last
three decades, many complications have accompanied rapid
agricultural development that
impinge on food
quality and safety, even management of the shortened growth cycle
of domestic animals. Rural environment pollution, increased greenhouse gas
emissions, and grassland deterioration are also
exacerbated.
A hard look at recent decades reveals
the unit yield increase is, in fact, not impressive. In my home
village, for
example, the wheat
yield per mu (1/15 hectare) reached 500 kilos in 1978, but today,
it languishes around 400
kilos. One reason for the drop is the
blunted initiative I've already mentioned, and the other is that
the contribution
of chemical
fertilizers and pesticides to grain output is actually decreasing;
in some cases they actually reduce
yields. China
overproduces chemical fertilizers. Every year 6-7 percent of
chemical fertilizers applied to the farmland
is to no avail. This
is not only a waste of money, but also causes serious
pollution.
In a way, new technology has made human
beings brutal to the animal and plant world. With the increased use
of
chemical fertilizers, pesticides,
herbicides and plastic films, farmers have grown lazy, and the soil
becomes more impoverished. Straw and stalks are burned, severing
the nutrition cycle by which soil renews itself.
CT: Can we say the government's
agricultural subsidy policy works then?
Jiang: Let me put it
this way. The United States has six million farmers who sustain the
country's agriculture by
machines and big
government subsidies. China does not have such a large and
universal subsidy scheme. The
actual budget is small, averaging dozens
of yuan per mu. Even if the government increased the unit subsidy
to RMB
1,000 per mu, farmers may still not be
tempted. If they can get RMB 1,000 a month by working in cities,
why would
an annual RMB 1,000 turn things around,
make all that hardship worth it? This situation is a big challenge
to the development of China's agriculture.
Look at who and what present subsidies
reward. They go mostly to manufacturers of commodities used in
agriculture – chemical fertilizer, pesticide and plastic film – and
seed dealers. In my opinion, the focus of subsidies should
be
reversed and directed
to grain prices. Only in this way can grain growers benefit
directly from this policy.
CT: How does the farmland transfer
policy influence grain production?
Jiang: Personally, I'm
not optimistic about this policy. The contract responsibility
policy binds farmers to their land
but the farmland
transfer policy counteracts that and dissociates them from the
land. If we follow the U.S. example
and entrust
agriculture to a small number of big farmers, or in a figure of
speech, if 1.2 billion people beg 0.1 billion agribusinessmen for
food, this small and powerful group of food growers may not care if
people starve as long as
their own interests are
served.
Transition to
Eco-Farming
CT: In your opinion, what is the
solution that will ensure grain supply?
Jiang: There are two
ways to raise grain output. One, to increase the unit yield.
Academician Yuan Longping has
dedicated his life to raising the unit
yield of rice and showed us how the same size paddy can sustain
more lives.
Two is to implement
the "greater grain" program. My teacher Hou Xueyu has watched
agricultural development
closely since the 1950s and has proposed
the "greater grain" concept to address the weakness he sees. In
a
nutshell, anything edible counts as
grain, such as stalks and other agricultural wastes that can be
converted into
meat and milk.
I don't think mono-farming has a future,
but eco-farming does. By combining animal, plant and
microorganism
resources we can achieve eco-farming.
According to our preliminary experiments, China produces 700
million tons
of stalks a year. If
they are used to feed cattle, we can raise 100 million tons of
cattle. If the meat yield rate is 54
percent, we can obtain
54 million tons of beef, or an equivalent of 270 million tons of
grain (one kilo of beef equals
five kilos of grain in
nutrition and calorie). Deducting 100 million tons of grain used to
fatten cattle, we end up with
a pure grain gain of
170 million tons.
This calculation has not even accounted
for the unused potential of the 400 million hectares of pastureland
set free
of pasturing by the size of such a herd.
We've conducted intense experiments and found that one mu of
pasture can
sustain at least one
chicken – feeding entirely on grass seeds, leaves and insects –
without getting damaged. If
this potential is
layered in, we get an extra 3.15 billion kilos of organic chicken
meat, or the equivalent of 15.8
million tons of
grain.
Those two contingencies equate to 185.8
million tons of grain, which means a 37 percent increase over the
current
national grain output.
No other regular and available agricultural technology can achieve
the same results. If the
"greater grain" idea can be implemented,
China will be able not only to feed its huge population, but also
feed it well.
To guarantee food security, therefore,
we must come back to eco-farming, a cyclical process that
integrates animals
and plants into
agricultural production, that uses physical and biological
disciplines for pest control, and that
replaces chemical fertilizers with
animal feces.
CT: How to develop eco-farming in
China?
Jiang: Currently,
farmers need urban consumers' help to develop organic farming, that
is, the organic products must
have buyers. Only
through effective joining of consumption and production can
eco-farming increase productivity. In addition, part of the rural labor
force that has flowed into cities should be freed from those
labor-intensive sectors and encouraged to return to farming.
Though organic farming is the only
solution to food security in the long run, it cannot be realized
all at once. It is a
gradual process, starting with some
growers and some consumers who demonstrate its benefits before it
can be
promoted nationwide.
Now the governments of Beijing's Yanqing County, Shandong's Zibo
City and Inner Mongolia's
Jungar Banner have
seen the social and economic benefits of organic farming and have
stepped up their efforts to showcase their eco-farming projects.
This is encouraging news.
CT: What inspiration can be drawn
from your Shandong experimental eco-farm?
Jiang: It has achieved
satisfactory results since its startup in 2007 – a mere three
years. We harvest stalks to feed
cattle, use cattle
feces as fertilizer, control pests using trapping lamps, and use
the weeds removed from fields to
feed fish and chicken. We have gradually
cut the use of chemical fertilizers and substituted organic
controls, so the
soil continues to recover. After
deducting the wages of five villagers at RMB 50,000 per year, our
40 mu of land brings
in twice as much money as that of other villagers managing the same
size of field.
Increasing farmers' enthusiasm relies on
the market. The way out lies in increasing demand for the many
real
benefits of eco-farming.
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