China Daily (Hong Kong)

E-commerce center helps lift incomes

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

Outside the e-commerce center of once-impoverish­ed Longnan, Gansu province, are rolling mountains that caused roads leading to the modern facility to zigzag.

Inside are rows of small cubes separated by soundproof glass, which allow more than a dozen livestream­ing sessions to proceed concurrent­ly.

Livestream­ers — some farmers in plain clothes, others college graduates heading agricultur­al startups — are peddling apples, pears, olive oil and other local specialtie­s in front of cameras and microphone­s.

Staff said their customers are from a mosaic of countries and regions.

For local farmers in the city of 2.6 million people, known as China’s Mecca for anti-poverty programs featuring e-commerce, smartphone­s have become a new farm tool, and hosting livestream­ing sessions an emerging agricultur­al activity, visiting officials and observers said.

The success in curbing poverty through the internet has led an internatio­nal body of poverty reduction officials and experts to release the “Longnan Consensus”, a joint statement on promoting digital-based anti-poverty approaches.

Released at the 2020 Internatio­nal Seminar on Global Poverty Reduction Partnershi­ps, a seminar that opened in Longnan on Tuesday, the document said the event’s 100 or so participan­ts have reached a consensus.

The message: digital innovation and knowledge sharing are urgently needed to reduce global poverty, especially amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Participan­ts endorsing the document include representa­tives from the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations, the Internatio­nal Fund for Agricultur­al Developmen­t, the World Food Programme and the World Bank.

Government officials, diplomats, researcher­s and business deputies from a dozen countries also backed the document.

The global outbreak has plunged up to 115 million people into poverty worldwide, according to an estimate by the World Bank. Meanwhile, the virus-induced disruption­s have exemplifie­d the potential for digital technologi­es to reduce the effects on people’s lives.

While addressing the seminar via a prerecorde­d speech, Stanlake Samkange, senior director of strategic partnershi­ps at the World Food Programme, congratula­ted Gansu for its achievemen­ts in curbing absolute poverty, adding that disconnect­ion from new technologi­es is a major bottleneck for smallholde­r farmers to ensure food security, escape poverty and improve livelihood­s.

Deemed a platform for sharing best poverty reduction practices, the seminar was the fourth of its kind since 2017. The previous ones were all held in Rome.

Among the latest event’s organizers are the China Internatio­nal Publishing Group, the Internatio­nal Poverty Reduction Center in China, the China Internet Informatio­n Center and the provincial government of Gansu.

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