China: Saving every drop of water to nourish the corn belt
September 2, 2008 by admin
Filed under World's Water
On a routine stroll in her 11.2 hectares of cornfields one recent morning, farmer Cui Shulan heaved a sigh of relief. This year, she will get a bumper crop of corn.
“Nature has treated us kindly this year,” said the 61-year-old farmer from Dongling village in Jilin province. “We’ve had ample sunshine and adequate rainfall. If all goes well, we could get a yield of 17,500 kg in the fall.”
Like millions of small farmers who eke out a living on small patches of land, Cui’s fortunes are dependent on Mother Nature.
“Crop plantation in Jilin is still at the mercy of weather,” Cui said simply. “One year we have a bumper harvest, while another very poor one.”
Despite being the world’s largest agricultural country with the bulk of its population – 56 percent – in rural areas, China’s farming practices have changed very little throughout the centuries. The country’s rapid urbanization and economic growth in the last few decades have only widened the gap between the rural and urban economies.
The increasing gap in income between city and country has prompted the central government to focus more attention on rural areas, and on agricultural development.
This is especially important for a province like Jilin, which is home to one of the world’s top three corn production belts, the other two being in the United States and Ukraine.
In Jilin, the main factor that has hampered agricultural development is lack of water due to a poor farmland irrigation system. Although the province has had good crop yields for five consecutive years, it is still beset by frequent natural disasters.
“We can raise our grain production capacity if we can improve water conservation,” said Su Zheng of the water resources department of the Jilin province.
Cui, whose village on the edge of the Songnen plain is one of the country’s major corn producers, agreed: “Without a good water conservancy project, droughts and floods still threaten our crops every year. Due to a severe drought last year, our yield was only a little more than 11,500 kg.”
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Source: The China Daily
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