November 23, 2024 | 19:54 GMT +7

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Thursday- 08:46, 24/03/2022

China faces worst crop conditions ever due to climate change

(VAN) More extreme weather caused by rising global temperatures- compounded by geopolitical turmoil and the pandemic - is hindering China’s effort to ensure food supplies for its 1.4 billion population.
Harvested rice is deposited in a grain hauler tractor in Shanghai.  Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

Harvested rice is deposited in a grain hauler tractor in Shanghai.

Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

President Xi Jinping has made food security a priority for the world’s second-biggest economy, an effort to meet the soaring demand that’s pushed imports of corn, soybeans and wheat to record levels, making Beijing increasingly vulnerable to trade tensions and supply shocks. At the same time, climate change-induced disasters have caused widespread crop damage and shrunk the amount of arable land, making it harder to boost local production.

Tang Renjian, the country’s agriculture minister, brought up the threat at a high-profile government meeting in Beijing this month. “China faces big difficulties in food production because of the unusual floods last autumn,” he told reporters. “Many faming experts and technicians told us that crop conditions this year could be the worst in history.”

More than 860 people died or went missing in natural disasters last year, which damaged almost 30 million acres of crops. Record-breaking rains in the central province of Henan in July alone damaged 2.1 million acres of farmland. The floods delayed planting on more than 18 million acres of land, about one-third of China’s total winter wheat acreage. The amount of first- and second-grade crops, where there are more than 2.7 million seedlings on every acre of land, fell by more than 20% this year compared with normal years.

Climate change hurts China’s pursuit of food security in two ways, according to Zhang Zhaoxin, a researcher with the agricultural ministry. More frequent extreme weather events

are already lowering crop yields. Meanwhile, increasingly unpredictable seasons can undermine farmers’ confidence and potentially worsen the sector’s existing labor shortage.

Farmers in northern China are used to droughts, not floods, Zhang said. In many of the regions that were affected by torrential rain last year, farmers couldn’t harvest their corn because their machinery couldn’t handle the water. There wasn’t enough infrastructure such as pipes and systems to drain the field in time.

Those issues are set to get more serious as the planet warms. Seasonal droughts will reduce yields of China’s three major staple foods — rice, wheat and corn — by 8% by the end of the decade, according to World Resources Institute. In the longer term, climate change also means rising coastal waters along the long and low eastern coal could further stress the agricultural industry.

“As climate change continues to intensify in coming years, weather events are going to have a greater and greater impact on agricultural productivity,” said Even Pay, an agricultural analyst with Trivium. Ramping up imports isn’t a viable alternative, she added, pointing out that global warming makes food cultivation more challenging globally. “Climate change felt in the rest of the world could also impact China’s food security,” she said.

BRAZIL GRAIN EXPORTERS FACE TROUBLE AS PORT TAX COLLECTORS PROTEST

Agricultural exporters in Brazil are facing a hard time getting paid for their shipments due to a protest by tax collectors at Latin America’s busiest port, the National Association of Grain Exporters (Anec) told Reuters on Tuesday.

The protest is delaying the issuance of phytosanitary certificates, an inspection document used for plant products, which is required for exporters to receive payments, Anec’s director Sergio Mendes said. Inspections can only happen once tax collectors have cleared the shipments.

The setback comes as Brazil reaches a seasonal peak for soybean shipments. The Santos port in Sao Paulo, where the protest is taking place, accounts for about 30% of the country’s soybean exports and half of its corn and soy meal exports.

“A 65,000-tonne soybean shipment is currently worth $42 million, and if the exporters do not get the phytosanitary certificate, they will not get that revenue as well,” Mendes said.

Major global grain traders are among Anec’s associates, including Archer Daniels Midland Co, Cargill Inc, and Louis Dreyfus Company.

Brazilian tax collectors have initiated a work-to-rule effort – which legally allows workers to meet only the minimum job requirements – last year as they campaign for higher wages.

The labor action has just recently started affecting the grain industry, Mendes said, adding that he sent a letter to Economy Minister Paulo Guedes asking for solutions.

Brazil’s Economy Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment, while the federal revenue service declined to comment.

Mauro Silva, head of tax collectors’ union Unafisco, said the workers will keep protesting.

“If our problem does not get solved by the end of April, the work-to-rule effort might be kept in place until a new administration takes office,” Silva said.

Brazil will hold general elections in October. Far-right President Jair Bolsonaro is expected to run for re-election, but he currently trails former leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in opinion polls. The winner will take office in January 2023.

Tr.D

(Bloomberg; Reuters)

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