AGRICULTURE IN CHINA
China feeds
22 percent of the world population with only seven percent of the planet's
arable land. Land is heavily utilized for agriculture. Vegetables are planted
on road embankments, in traffic triangles and right up the walls of many
buildings. Even so since 1949 China has lost one fifth of its arable land. Only
about 10 to 15 percent of the land in China is good for agriculture (compared
to 1 percent in Saudi Arabia, 50 percent in India, 20 percent in the United
States, and 32 percent in France). There is 545,960 square kilometers of
irrigated land in China. Forty percent of China's crop land is irrigated,
compared to 23 percent in India. The average yield per acre in China is double
that of India.
China traditionally has struggled to feed its large population.
Even in the twentieth century, famines periodically ravaged China's population.
Great emphasis has always been put on agricultural production, but weather,
wars, and politics often mitigated good intentions. With the onset of reforms
in the late 1970s, the relative share of agriculture in the gross domestic
product (GDP) began to increase annually. Driven by sharp rises in prices paid
for crops and a trend toward privatization in agriculture, agricultural output
increased from 30 percent of GDP in 1980 to 33 percent of GDP by 1983. Since
then, however, agriculture has decreased its share in the economy at the same
time that the services sector has increased. By 2004 agriculture (including
forestry and fishing) produced only 15.2 percent of China's GDP but still is
huge by any measure. Some 46.9 percent of the total national workforce was
engaged in agriculture, forestry, and fishing in 2004. [Source: Library of
Congress]
China is the world's top consumer of meat and grain. As it becomes
more affluent people consume more meat and cooking oil and this has lead to
increased demand for soybeans as an oil source and feed for livestock. China
also uses more fertilizer that any other country.
David Pierson wrote in the Los Angeles Times, “In contrast to
large, highly mechanized American farms, a typical Chinese farm is less than an
acre in size and worked by hand. It's a legacy of communist reform, when the
state seized control of China's farmland and subdivided it into tiny plots.
Although this system has kept rural dwellers employed, it has slowed China's
ability to boost their incomes.
With China's accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO) in
2001, food export opportunities have developed that have brought about still more
efficient farming techniques. As a result, traditional areas such as grain
production have decreased in favor of cash crops of vegetables and fruit for
domestic and export trade. [Source: Library of Congress]
Improved farming policies and technologies have given China a high
level of self-sufficiency and growth. But the country's top economic planning
body warned that this would be hard to maintain. The lack of farm subsidies and
expropriation of farmland for urban construction has crippled agriculture. As
more farmers move to the cities, lured by better housing, education and other
incentives, maintaining the food supply becomes more tenuous. One Chine
agriculture expert told The Guardian, “We cannot be complacent. We know
supply-and-demand is vulnerable. We have a forced balance now that requires
strong intervention by the government. This is a tense balance that can be
easily broken."
Agricultural regions
Agricultural Regions in China
Most of China is unproductive agriculturally. Arable land is
concentrated in a band of river valleys and along the southern and eastern
coasts.
Wheat, corn, soybeans, barley, kaoliang (sorghum), millet are
grown in the north and central China. Rice is the dominate crop in the south.
Some places produce double crops of rice. Most crops for export are grown in
the coastal areas. These areas have relatively good roads and access to ports
used for exporting produce.
The Northern Plain, which includes Beijing, is home to 65 percent
of China's agriculture but only 24 percent of it water. It produces half of
China's wheat and corn. It suffered from lower water table caused by too much
pumping of water.
The Yangtze River delta is another important agricultural area. It
is home to 30 million people and fertile soils produce a tenth of the country's
crops. The crop yields there are expected to decline as large scale industries
expand from nearby Shanghai and occupy productive agricultural land.
Mechanized agriculture makes more sense for northeast China which
is made up largely of flat plain. Farms controlled by individual farmers and
villages make more sense in the more mountainous southwest.
China is very mountainous. A lot of slopes and hillsides have terraces
built on them so crops, particularly rice, can be grown on them. In barren
Qinghai province, the only locally-grown food is raised in crude greenhouse
made from plastic stretched over a bamboo frame.
See Global
WarmingAgricultural Land in China
Farm land is still owned and controlled by the state and leased to
farmers. It can not be bought or sold only leased. Land essentially belongs to
local governments, a holdover from the commune era. Reforms passed in the Deng
era allowed individuals to contract land from villages. To be converted into
non-agricultural land it has to be reclaimed by the government and rezoned.
Peasants often have little say on the fate of the land they work
even thought it may have been worked by their families for generations.
Most farmland is measured in mu, which is roughly equal to a sixth
of an acre. On average a household tends a plot of land measuring 1.2 acres but
can be as small as an eighth of an acre.
These days farmers sign 30-year leases for the right to work a plot
and but they no longer are required to pay harvest quotas or most agricultural
taxes. They don't own the land, they can't sell it and they can't use it for
collateral on a loan.
A policy approved by the Communist Party in October 2008 that aims
to end rural poverty gives farmers the right to trade, rent, sublet,
subcontract, engage in joint stock ownership and transfer their land rights. If
all goes according to plan the move will help impoverished farmers double their
income to $1,200 by 2020 and provide them with money they didn't have before
and create a huge new reserve of private wealth that will stimulate domestic
spending and growth.
In 2011 The Economist reported: "Most of the land in China
that can be farmed profitably is already under cultivation and that available
land is actually shrinking in the face of development. In addition, yields are
beginning to plateau with little expectation of major gains. After Mao Zedong
died and land was opened up for commercial development, each plot came with only
a 50-year government lease. No one knows what will happen when those leases
expire. Yet building projects continue apace."
See separate
article: Problems faced by Farmers in ChinaChinese Farmers
About 35 percent of China's labor force is in agriculture
(compared to 2.5 percent in the U.S.). There are 425 million agricultural
workers (200 million farming households) in China. A little over a decade ago
China was home to 700 million farmers. They made up about 60 percent of the
population.
A typical farmer earns 5,000 yuan a year from selling rice, wheat,
canola, and pigs and has four acres he leases from the state. Taxes and fees
eat about 4,000 yuan. School fees for children eat up another 2,000 yuan.
Housing costs are minimal unless the farmer wants to make improvements or buy
possessions. Most of their food they grow themselves.
Many farmers take outside jobs or buy a truck or receive
remittances from a child or relative to make ends meet. They can usually cover
expenses unless there is a string of weddings or funerals in which they have to
fork out substantial gift payments.
Farmers typically live is a small brick house with electricity and
a television. They have no pension and want their kids to go to university but
don't know how they will pay for it. Young people don't want to be farmers. One
21-year-old woman who left her village for a factory job told Reuters, “Nobody
our age farms anymore. Nobody my age can plant a stalk. You need to leave to
make real money."
Farmer have suffered in modern China. Onw small factory owner told
National Geographic, "Farmers find it hard to survive in an industrialized
society. Farmer want to work in the factories, but transition is difficult and
few of them adjust. They have no skills. They lack education. They lack the
attitude one needs to learn. They have no sense of time, of living by the
clock." The small-scale farmer is largely seen as a dying breed in China,
made up mostly of the elderly left behind in the mass exodus of migrant workers
to much higher-paying jobs in industrial cities.
See Rural
Life, Problems Faced by FarmersIncreasingly Large Harvests in China
The autumn harvest typically accounts for three quarters of total
grain production. China has had strong grain harvests from 2005 to 2010. Grain
harvests in 2009 were a record 530.82 million tons.China The harvest was about
510 million tons in 2007. Grain production dropped from 512 million tons in
1998 to 430 million tons in 2003 and increased to 470 million tons in 2004 and
484 million tons in 2005 thanks to favorable weather and incentive to farmers.
In 1993 China produced 440 million tons of wheat, rice and other grains.
According to United Nations statistics, China's cereal production
is the largest in the world. In 2003 China produced 377 million tons, or 18.1
percent of total world production. Its plant oil crops---at 15 million tons in
2003---are a close second to those of the United States and amounted to 12.6
percent of total world production. More specifically, China's principal crops
in 2004 were rice (176 million tons), corn (132 million tons), sweet potatoes
(105 million tons), wheat (91 million tons), sugarcane (89 million tons), and potatoes
(70 million tons). Other grains, such as barley, buckwheat, millet, oats, rye,
sorghum, and tritcale (a wheat-rye hybrid), added substantially to overall
grain production. [Source: Library of Congress]
Crops of peanuts, rapeseed, soybeans, and sugar beets also were
significant, as was vegetable production in 2004. Among the highest levels of
production were cabbages, tomatoes, cucumbers, and dry onions. In 2004 fruit
production also became a significant aspect of the agricultural market. China
produced large crops of watermelons, cantaloupes, and other melons that year.
Other significant orchard products were apples, citrus fruits, bananas, and
mangoes. China, a nation of numerous cigarette smokers, also produced 2.4
million tons of tobacco leaves. [Source: Library of Congress]
Fertilizer use was a major contributor to these abundant harvests.
In 2002 China consumed 25.4 million tons of nitrogenous fertilizers, or 30
percent of total world consumption and more than double the consumption of
other major users such as India and the United States in the same period. Among
the less used fertilizers, China also was a leader. It consumed 9.9 million
tons of phosphate fertilizers (29.5 percent of the world total) and 4.2 million
tons of potash fertilizers (18.2 percent of the world total).
Food Self-Sufficiency in China
Lauren Keane wrote in the Washington Post, “China has a
long-standing policy of food self-sufficiency, growing 95 percent of the grain
required to feed its people. The country's sheer size means that a major crop
failure or other food emergency here could have international ramifications,
overwhelming world food markets with sudden demand. "Were China to need to
import a large amount of grain, it would have a very dramatic impact on world
food prices," said Anthea Webb, director of World Food Program China.
[Source:Lauren Keane, Washington Post, May 31, 2010]
The challenge of feeding a growing nation on a shrinking supply of
arable land while confronting severe water shortages has long been a major
concern here. China has to feed one-fifth of the world's population on
one-tenth of its arable land, and the nation's expanding cities are consuming
farmland at breakneck speed. China estimates that by 2030, when its population
is expected to level off at roughly 1.5 billion, it will need to produce an
additional 100 million tons of food each year.
Tan Ee Lyn of Reuters wrote: China's agriculture minister said
that China faced a formidable task in meeting demand for grains such as rice,
wheat and corn over the next 10 years. Its water resources are meagre --
amounting to 25 percent of the per capita world average. And a quarter of its
water is so polluted it is unfit even for industrial use. China's grain harvest
stood at 530 million tonnes of grain in 2009 and it will need to increase
annual supply by 4 million tonnes over the next 10 years. Beijing imported U.S.
corn for the first time since 2006 and is the world's top buyer of soybeans.
"In China, rice is the most important crop and it uses 50 percent of the
freshwater China has each year," Chinese geneticist Zhang Gengyun told
Reuters. [Source: Tan Ee Lyn, Reuters, September 17, 2010]
Howard Schneider wrote in the Washington Post, “China has remained
largely self-sufficient in wheat, rice and corn. The government has encouraged
production of these crops through measures such as setting base-line prices for
farmers. To see how much longer China can remain self-sufficient, the markets
for these staples are being watched closely by commodity trading companies,
U.S. farmers, the World Bank and other organizations concerned with global food
security. [Source: Howard Schneider, Washington Post May 22, 2011]
Grain and Food Imports in China
In 2012, the World Trade Organization (WTO) said that China had
surpassed the United States to become the world's largest importer of
agricultural products. Even with 700 million farmers China is unable to meet
the country's demand grains, soy beans and other commodities.
China is increasingly importing corn to keep up with demand
resulting in part from dietary changes and its use in producing biofuels. China
relies on American farmers in particular for soybeans to use in animal feed.
Last year, total U.S. soy exports were nearly $20 billion---triple the level of
a decade ago.
In April 2012, the Financial Times reported: “China's grain
imports hit a record high in March 2012, as the world's most populous country
increasingly turns to overseas markets to meet its agricultural needs. Customs
data from Beijing revealed that grain imports reached 1.64 million tonnes in
March, up sixfold from a year earlier and up 50 percent from the previous
month. China has to feed a fifth of the world's population with only 8 percent
of the world's arable land, and does not grow genetically modified grains. As
rising incomes and more meat-heavy diets boost grain demand, China's reliance
on imports has slowly increased. [Source: Financial Times, April 10, 2012]
Big corn purchases likely contributed to the jump in grain imports,
said traders. The grain category includes corn, wheat, rice and barley. China
accounts for about 20 percent of the world's corn consumption and only 4
percent of global corn trade, but its sudden increase in corn buying has
greatly tightened the global market. China's corn imports in January and
February 2012 totaled 1.26 million tonnes, four hundred times more than the
same period last year. China's domestic corn prices are among the highest in
the world, and during January and February commercial firms were taking
advantage of the arbitrage between Chinese and US corn prices to import corn at
a profit.
Grain recorded the single biggest year-on-year jump in percentage
terms of any commodity with a 500 percent increase, according to the customs
data released. Analyst Ma Wenfeng at Beijing Orient Agribusiness said he
expects China's grain imports to grow. He forecasts corn imports will hit 7
million tonnes in 2012, and wheat between 1.5 million to 2 million tonnes.
"The key thing is the price," said Mr Ma. "Right now China's
corn prices are incredibly high. . . if [state owned commodity trading house]
Cofco can make money then it will import."
Others pointed out that mold and mildew had damaged some stored
corn last year, contributing to tight domestic corn market. "Production
[of corn] has increased significantly in China, but safe and secure storage
have not grown in conjunction," said Rabobank analyst Daron Hoffman. Wheat
imports have also soared. China's wheat imports in January and February were 580,000
tonnes, more than three times higher than the same period last year. [Ibid]
Modern Agriculture Technology, Tainted Food and Pollution
Farmland in Sichuan Most crops in China are raised with pesticides, chemical fertilizers and sewage sludge. Fertilizer is subsidized and is cheaper than its real cost. Farmers overuse it and overuse causes environmental damage.
China has very advanced agricultural research centers and
laboratories that do research and churn out reams of data on the latest
fertilizers, pollution risks and genetically-engineered crops The problem is
that the data and insights these researchers come up with rarely finds its way
to farmers, who mostly rely on the pesticide and fertilizer salesmen to keep
them informed. Even then necessity often keeps them from following directions.
Villagers given instructions to use the pesticides only once every 15 days are
likely to use pesticides more frequently than that if their crops are being
swarmed by insects.
These practices are sometimes blamed on high levels of chemicals
found in agricultural products and in streams and rivers that receive a lot of
agricultural run-off. Shipments of plums, lemons, star fruit, kumquts,
scallions and ginseng to the United States have been blocked by U.S. Food and
Drug Administration because of problems with pesticides and toxic additives.
In the 1980s, farmers were encouraged to use chemical pesticides
and fertilizers to boost production. By the 2000s it had become clear that not
only was the policy causing pollution and it was fouling agricultural land and
reducing productivity. The government is now trying to encourage farmers tp
come with alternatives to chemicals.
See Food
Safety Exploding Watermelons and Yard-Long Beans in China
“Watermelons have been bursting by the score in eastern China
after farmers gave them overdoses of growth chemicals during wet weather,
creating what state media called fields of “land mines,"" Alexa
Olesen of Associated Press wrote. “Prices over the past year prompted many
farmers to jump into the watermelon market. All of those with exploding melons
apparently were first-time users of the growth accelerator forchlorfenuron,
though it has been widely available for some time, CCTV said. [Source: Alexa
Olesen, Associated Press, May 17, 2011]
About 20 farmers around Danyang city in Jiangsu province were
affected, losing up to 115 acres (45 hectares) of melon, China Central
Television (CCTV) said in an investigative report. Wang Liangju, a professor
with College of Horticulture at Nanjing Agricultural University who has been to
Danyang since the problems began to occur, said that forchlorfenuron is safe
and effective when used properly. He told The Associated Press that the drug
had been used too late into the season, and that recent heavy rain also raised
the risk of the fruit cracking open. But he said the variety of melon also
played a role. [Ibid]
"If it had been used on very young fruit, it wouldn't be a
problem," Wang said. "Another reason is that the melon they were
planting is a thin-rind variety and these kind are actually nicknamed the
'exploding melon' because they tend to split." Chinese regulations don't
forbid the drug, and it is allowed in the U.S. on kiwi fruit and grapes. But
the report underscores how farmers in China are abusing both legal and illegal
chemicals, with many farms misusing pesticides and fertilizers. [Ibid]
Farmer Liu Mingsuo ended up with eight acres (three hectares) of
ruined fruit and told CCTV that seeing his crop splitting open was like a knife
cutting his heart. "On May 7, I came out and counted 80 (burst
watermelons) but by the afternoon it was 100," Liu said. "Two days later
I didn't bother to count anymore." Intact watermelons were being sold at a
wholesale market in nearby Shanghai, the report said, but even those ones
showed telltale signs of forchlorfenuron use: fibrous, misshapen fruit with
mostly white instead of black seeds. [Ibid]
In March 2010, Chinese authorities found that
"yard-long" beans from the southern city of Sanya had been treated
with the banned pesticide isocarbophos. The tainted beans turned up in several
provinces, and the central city of Wuhan announced it destroyed 3.5 tons of the
vegetable. The government also has voiced alarm over the widespread overuse of
food additives like dyes and sweeteners that retailers hope will make food more
attractive and boost sales. [Ibid]
Though Chinese media remain under strict government control,
domestic coverage of food safety scandals has become more aggressive in recent
months, an apparent sign that the government has realized it needs help
policing the troubled food industry. The CCTV report on watermelons quoted Feng
Shuangqing, a professor at the China Agricultural University, as saying the
problem showed that China needs to clarify its farm chemical standards and
supervision to protect consumer health.The broadcaster described the
watermelons as "land mines" and said they were exploding by the acre
(hectare) in the Danyang area. Many of farmers resorted to chopping up the
fruit and feeding it to fish and pigs, the report said. [Ibid]
Efforts to Increase Agricultural Production
Among the more radical steps being taken to increase production
are using new strains of genetically modified rice and buying and cultivating
land in neighboring countries such as Russia, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan by
agricultural entrepreneurs. A spokesman for a Beijing research institute said
the government is not involved in the cross-border expansion of Chinese
farming. “We don't believe that going to rent and farm in other countries is a
reliable policy option," he told The Guardian. [Source: Jonathan Watts,
The Guardian, February 23, 2010]
The Chinese government does not want to move towards the
mega-farms seen in many other countries because a plot of land is a form of
social security for the 850 million registered rural residents. [Ibid]
Increased Investments in Chinese Agriculture
In March 2009, China announced it would increase spending on
agricultural production by 20 percent amid warnings of harmful effects of
climate change, food shortages and food crises. As a central part of his annual
budget speech at the Great Hall of the People Prime Minister Wen Jiabao's said
an extra 121 billion yuan ($20 billion bn) would be spent on boosting farm
yields and raising rural incomes. [Source: Jonathan Watts, The Guardian, March
5, 2009]
The government's spending aimed to boost overall domestic consumption
with a strong emphasis on intensive agriculture. The short-term aim is to ease
the impact of the economic crisis on rural dwellers and reduce sources of
social instability and increase grain prices as an incentive for farmers to
produce more. [Ibid]
Lei Ming, an environmental economist at Peking University said the
extra spending on agriculture was a precautionary step. “The impact of climate
change on food production is uncertain. It may go up, but it is also possible
that we will face massive food shortages. To avoid such a risk, we need to
prepare ourselves. I think that's one of the reasons the government is
increasing the agriculture budget." [Ibid]
Environmental groups said that the extra investment in rural
infrastructure was welcome, but that it could prove counter-productive if not
spent on sustainable farming. “If it is used to subsidize more chemical
fertilizers that would be bad, but it could benefit both farmers and the
environment if it was used to support eco-friendly cultivation," said Sze
Pangcheung, Greenpeace campaign director. “But that would require a big
paradigm shift." Currently, the focus of most funding and research in
China is on intensive agriculture and genetic engineering. [Ibid]
Problems in Feeding the World's Largest Nation
For China to feed itself is a major undertaking. It has to feed 21
percent of world's people with 7 percent of the world's arable land. This means
that China's entire population of 1.3 billion people China (four times as many
people as in the United States) must be fed on arable land that covers less
territory than the state of Texas. Massive famines have been a recurrent themes
in Chinese history.
There are worries that China may not be able to produce enough
corn, wheat and rice to feed its people and become dependant on foreign food
sources and a slave to world food prices. Contributing to this problem are the
urbanization or arable land, the scarcity of water and the exodus of labor from
rural area to the cities. "China is losing the capacity to feed
itself," wrote Lester Brown of the Worldwatch Institute in the Washington
Post. "When that happens the food supply of the whole world will be
affected, casting the shadow of global scarcity on humanity for the first
time."
China has had strong grain harvests from 2005 to 2010. Grain
harvests in 2009 were a record 530.82 million tons."After five years of
bumper harvests, it will be very difficult to keep grain production growing
steadily," the National Development and Reform Commission said in its
annual report in 2009 , pledging to keep overall output in the coming year at
least steady at 500 million tonnes. It is estimated that China will need to
increase annual harvests by four million tons a year just to keep abreast of
population growth. Satisfying the appetite of a population growing at the rate
of 12 million people per year is all the more difficult as the impacts of
climate change are felt.
The Worldwatch Institute estimates that if grain consumption per
person in China were to equal the U.S. rate China would consumer two thirds of
the world's grain harvest To feed its huge population, China has to import
foodstuffs from abroad. China sometimes exports rice and imports wheat and
relies on American crops for more than a third of its food supply. The levels
of grain reserves are kept secret. When shortfalls occur it is not clear his
much grain is imported or how its taken frm reserves.
Even if China doubles its grain output in 20 years it still will
not be able to feed each Chinese as well as he or she eats today. "If
China fails to double it food production and instead continues to waste
agricultural and water resources," one Chinese analyst told the New York
Times, "then China will have to import 400 million tons of grain from the
world market and I am afraid in that case that all the grain output of the
United States could not meet China's needs."
Changing Eating Chinese Eating Habits and Agriculture
Howard Schneider wrote in the Washington Post, “For China, changes
in food consumption are happening fast. In a nation where the word for rice is
synonymous with food, people are eating less rice and other grains, preferring
pork, fish and... chicken. Pig herds are swelling, and demand for some dairy
products has been climbing 20 percent a year. Chinese imports of soybeans, a
key animal feed, are booming. [Source: Howard Schneider, Washington Post May
22, 2011]
In China, food prices rose about 7 percent in 2010, according to
official statistics, prompting the government to release some of its emergency
reserves and put restrictions on sales of key staples such as wheat to try to
prevent hoarding or speculation.
The changing diet can be seen throughout Beijing---from the young
people hunkered around tables at a KFC, which has helped build a taste for
chicken filet sandwiches, to the profusion of yogurt stocked on grocery
shelves."Particularly over the last two years, [Beijing] has become a huge
market," said a sales representative for Yilli, one of two major local
dairy companies.
Meat, China's Food Shortages and the Rest of the World
Using all available land in Nanjing As consumption of meat and dairy products has increased an increasing amount of land, water and resources has gone to feeding animals that produce them. "Incomes are climbing at a record rate, which means the consumption of meat is increasing even faster than the population---placing ever greater demand all along the food chain," Brown wrote. "When China's economic reforms were launched in 1978, only 7 percent of the grain was being used for animal feed. By 1990, that share had risen to some 20 percent, most of it used to produce pork. Now, demand for beef and poultry is also climbing. More meat means more grain---two kilograms of additional grain for each kilogram of poultry, four for pork and seven for each kilogram of beef." [Source: Lester Brown, Washington Post]
Reuters reported: China's per person consumption of meat is 70 kg
(155 pounds) a year, of which 54 percent is pork. That will soar with rising
incomes reflecting more affluent areas like Hong Kong, where per capita meat
consumption is 120 kg a year, according to Rabobank. "The government wants
to secure food supply. The demand is for fresh meat," said Jean-yves Chow,
senior industry analyst at Rabobank in Hong Kong. "It doesn't want to rely
on meat imports." [Source: Tan Ee Lyn, Reuters, September 17, 2010]
"Allowing only for the projected population increases with no
rise in consumption per person, China's demand for grain would increase from
335 million tons in 1990 to 479 million in 2030. In other words even if China's
booming economy produced no gains in consumption of meat, eggs and beer, a 20
percent drop in grain production (to 263 tons) would leave a shortfall of 216
million tons---a level that exceed the world's entire 1993 grain exports of 200
million tons...The reality is that no country, or combination of countries,
could fill more than a small fraction of the potential food deficit forming in
China. [Source: Lester Brown, Washington Post]
Chinese demand for grain is expected to make price rise
significantly, which will in turn make food prices higher for consumers all
around the globe.
Organic Food and Farming in China
In recent years, the Chinese upper and middle class have begun to
embrace organic farming as a source of safe food as China has seen an unending
string of food scandals: melamine-injected milk, counterfeit baby formula,
bacteria-infected vegetables, pollution-poisoned fish and even cooking oil
recycled from sewage. Research by Japanese companies such as Asahi Beer
indicates that many farmers lack the knowledge on how ro use agricultural
chemicals. [Source: William Wan, Washington Post, November 1, 2010]
A survey by the Chinese government in 2010 found that about 5
percent of produce examined was polluted with harmful substances in excess of
government-set maximum levels. As is true with many things in China, there are
reasonably good laws on the books for food safety but following and enforcing
these laws is another story.
Organic milk can cost three times as much as regular milk but in
some areas people are willing to pay the price to ensure the milk is free of
chemicals and safe. Many ordinary Chinese take routine measures such as soaking
vegetables in water to remove chemicals and ensure they are safe. On preparing
vegetables such as winter melon and a housewife in Qingdao told the Yomiuri
Shimbun, “I soak them in water for at least 30 minutes and often use salt to
make sure they're safe."
Although organic produce stores are cropping up in Shanghai and
Beijing, prices are high. Desperate for clean food at affordable prices, some
Chinese families have formed cooperatives to buy directly from farmers---their
own version of special supply. [Source: Barbara Demick, Los Angeles Times,
September 16, 2011]
"There is not enough supply of organic food, there aren't so
many farmers who really know how to produce organically, and if you found a
farm, it is too expensive for ordinary people," said Liu Yujing, a Beijing
homemaker who founded a 100-family cooperative last year. The mother of a
4-year-old girl, Liu was motivated by the revelations of melamine-tainted milk.
"I know you can buy some organic food in shops, but I don't trust that
either. We've heard a lot of them are fake."
Among China's new echelon of super-rich, organic food has become a
luxury fad in high-end supermarkets in recent years - a status symbol like the
latest Gucci purse. Imagine, one Chinese yuppie told the Washington Post
knowing exactly where your food came from and what went into
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