China to raise grain output to 500m tons (Xinhua) Updated: 2006-03-07 09:37
China plans to increase its annual grain production capacity to approximately
500 million tons by 2010, a key target for the drive of building a new socialist
countryside, according to an official report seen in Beijing on
Monday.
"Efforts should be made to push China's overall grain output capacity to
around 500 million tons through stabilizing and improving grain production, in a
bid to realize basically self- supply and national food safety," read the Draft
Guidelines for the 11th Five-Year Plan for National Economic and Social
Development, which are being discussed at the annual full session of the Chinese
parliament, the Tenth National People's Congress ( NPC).
China's grain
output reached 484.01 million tons in 2005, up 3. 1 percent than the previous
year, according to a latest report by the National Bureau of Statistics.
The 500-million-ton goal requires an annual output growth of at least 25
million tons of grain, or an annual increase of 1 percent in the per unit yield
from the current 309.5 kg per mu (0.07 ha).
Priority should be given to the development of agricultural production,
particularly the protection of arable land, acceleration of technological
innovation and upgrading the agricultural structure, according to the draft
national development blueprint for the period of 2006-2010.
China faces a
great challenge in maintaining food supply safety given a growing population,
shrinking cropland and scarce water resource, said Huang Peijin, an expert of
rice breeding.
Huang, also a NPC deputy from the central province of Hunan attending the
on-going legislative session, called for large-scale application of the
technology of "super rice," or high-yield hybrid rice, in the rural areas,
saying it is an important way of ensuring food supply for China's 1.3 billion
population.
China launched a national project on super rice breeding in
2005, which is expected to cultivate some 20 high-yield rice strains in six
years.
Yuan Longping, China's "father of super rice", said last December that as the
first two phases of the project yielded 10.5 tons and 12 tons per hectare in
pilot farms in 2000 and 2004, respectively, and the latest variety is well on
track to produce up to 13.5 tons a hectare compared with an average of 6.5 tons
per hectare for conventional seeds.
Yuan developed the world's first
hybrid rice strain in 1974 and increased rice output by 15 to 20 percent.
A sound grain output is essential for the world's most populous country,
which has became a grain importer. Whether China can maintain a stable grain
output is crucial to its food safety, farmers' income, and the global grain
demand-and-supply relationship, experts said.
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