Very little sweet news for sugar producers
Updated: 2012-02-21 08:01
By Li Lianxing, Li Yingqing and Guo Anfei (China Daily)
|
|||||||||||
LINCANG, Yunnan - "I can't expect any profit this year and I don't know what to do next year," said Li Xiuzhong, a 65-year-old sugarcane farmer in Lincang, Southwest China's Yunnan province.
"We have 180 hectares of sugarcane last year and actually the beginning of the growing season was good due to sufficient rainfall," he said. "But after June, things got worse so quickly and now there is no harvest in 30 hectares."
His expectations have also dropped from five tons of crops for each hectare to three tons.
"These are already the best drought-resistant seeds and I have ploughed another 40 hectares for next year, hoping to earn more money," he said. "But now, I have lost confidence in growing them under current weather conditions."
He said he had grown sugarcane for more than 20 years and this year is the worst in terms of weather.
He is living on income from previous years.
Lincang used to be covered with thick forests and has rich water resources, but since the 2010 drought, its water conservation facilities have been under threat and agricultural production has been challenged.
|
Li Xiuzhong, a farmer, said this kind of "incomplete" sugarcane makes up much of this year's harvest, in Ma'an Mountain of Yunxian county, Lincang, Yunnan province. Li Lianxing / China Daily |
Hot Topics
Wu Ying, iPad, Jeremy Lin, Valentine's Day, Real Name, Whitney Houston, Syria,Iranian issue, Sanyan tourism, Giving birth in Hong Kong, Cadmium spill, housing policy
Editor's Picks
Worker suicides prompt probe |
Only drops of hope in drought lands |
Carnival parade in Barranquilla |
Sarkozy calls for support to build strong France |
ESPN sorry for offensive headline on Lin story |
Beckham takes How I Roll award with son |