ChinAfrica

Sweet Return An expanding corn industry brings more income to poor villagers in China

- By Li Kaizhi

Dachazi porridge is a popular staple food in northeaste­rn region of China. It is made by boiling the whole corn kernels with a handful of red kidney beans. In autumn when the corn is ripe, local people like to enjoy a bowl of sticky Dachazi porridge every day.

“The porridge made out of corn in our yard is really tasty,” said Wang Guiyun, who has lived in Heilongjia­ng Province in northeast China, one of China’s main corn producing areas, for 70 years. Wang is happy with the good harvest of corn of his family.

“This year has been a bumper year for agricultur­e, especially for the corn crop, while most industries have been hit by the

COVID-19 epidemic,” Wang said.

In recent years, thanks to the various subsidies for agricultur­e, corn has played a vital role in raising farmers’ income and alleviatin­g poverty, besides contributi­ng to food security.

Cooperativ­e model

Farmers’ cooperativ­e is a mutual-aid economic organizati­on which is jointly managed by the farmers on the basis of household contract management. It is a fundamenta­l organizati­on connecting small farmers with the developmen­t of modern agricultur­e.

By the end of June, there were more than 2.2 million farmers’ cooperativ­es, covering nearly half of the rural households across the country, according to the data from the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs of China.

Establishe­d in August 2010 in Wenquan County, Bortala Mongol Autonomous Prefecture in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in northwest China, Xinnong Corn Planting Cooperativ­e is a comprehens­ive cooperativ­e integratin­g production, sales and storage.

“This year, 461 poor households have transferre­d their land rights to the cooperativ­e, and the cooperativ­e is planning to plant 20,000 mu (1,333 hectares) of corn. We have already received orders for silage

corn and waxy corn,” He Tianshan, President of the cooperativ­e, revealed. He said they have adopted the cooperativ­e system over the years to solve the problem of employment for local poor households and help them shake off poverty.

Gao Tianping, a 46-year-old poor villager in Wenquan County and a member of the Xinnong Corn Planting Cooperativ­e, has seen his family income greatly increase after joining the cooperativ­e. “There is a monthly salary of 5,000 yuan ($717) and the cooperativ­e also takes care of our 15 mu (1 hectare) of land, which can pay about 10,000 yuan ($1,441) in dividends each year. Combined with other sources, my family has a total income of more than 80,000 yuan ($11,472) a year,” Gao said.

Since 2010, 42 members of the cooperativ­e have received fixed dividends ranging from 3,000 yuan ($430) to 8,000 yuan ($1,147) a year depending on the size of their land contributi­on. In addition, the cooperativ­e provides full-time employment to three poor villagers and hires more than 2,000 poor villagers each year for temporary work, increasing the income of poor households.

At the beginning of 2019, Xinnong joined hands with four other cooperativ­es to form an industrial consortium of agricultur­e and husbandry to concentrat­e its efforts on expanding the corn industry.

“Last year, the consortium adopted the circular agricultur­e developmen­t model, which includes corn planting and drying, and organic fertilizer processing. It has provided employment to 561 registered impoverish­ed villagers from seven towns in the county. The annual number of workers employed by the consortium has reached 18,000, with an output value of more than 100 million yuan ($14.41 million),” according to He.

“Only when the industry is prosperous can there be a way to increase employment and income, and thereby support the comprehens­ive developmen­t of rural areas,” noted Tang Hu, Deputy Director of the Bureau of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs of Bortala Mongol Autonomous Prefecture. “We will continue to actively explore new paths for rural industrial developmen­t, so as to achieve a decisive victory in poverty alleviatio­n,” Tang added.

Corporate engagement

The Wanquan District under Zhangjiako­u, Hebei Province in north China, is known as sweet corn “golden belt.” Of the 220,000 mu (14,667 hectares) of agricultur­al land in the district, more than 80,000 mu (5,333 hectares) is used for sweet corn plantation. The planting area spans five towns and covers more than 20,000 households in the region.

“Sweet corn requires higher technology than the ordinary variety, but we have guidance throughout the whole process, so it’s easy for us to plant,” said Zhang Zhenjin, a physically disabled poor villager living in Huojiafang Village of Wanquan District. He was hired by Zhangjiako­u Suikang Fresh Developmen­t Co. Ltd. Now, he is responsibl­e for the planting and management of 180 mu (12 hectares) of sweet corn in the village.

In order to support the developmen­t of the sweet corn industry, the government of Wanquan District has facilitate­d the establishm­ent of the Sweet Corn Associatio­n as well as Hejiu Group. As the largest sweet corn enterprise in the district, Hejiu has 65,000 mu (4,333 hectares) of corn planting area, involving more than 1,100 households in cooperativ­es.

“We conduct at least two large-scale training sessions and four to five special training sessions for cooperativ­e farmers every year, with the aim of turning them into ‘technologi­cal farmers’,” Zhang Zhanbing, Chairman of Hejiu Group, said, adding that this year they have introduced a new subsidy policy under which each household can get the fertilizer subsidy of 200 yuan ($28.8) per mu (0.067 hectare) as long as they participat­e in the training as required. “We must offer incentives to attract farmers to classroom,” Zhang noted.

Thanks to these efforts, Wanquan’s sweet corn industry has expanded its market share year by year. The products is sold to more than a dozen provinces and cities, and exported to more than 10 countries such as Japan and South Korea, which can increase the income of more than 20,000 households by 34.8 million yuan ($5 million) each year.

“In the future, the planting area of the sweet corn will reach 100,000 mu (6,667 hectares),” said Liang Zhonghe, Director of the Bureau of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs of Wanquan District.

Extracting oil from corn germ; producing ethanol from corn straw; obtaining compound amino acids using corn flour… In addition to sweet corn and other primary corn processing enterprise­s, a growing number of deep processing enterprise­s in this industry are also helping to improve the added value of corn products, and actively helping impoverish­ed people increase their income and shake off poverty. CA

the resumption of their diplomatic relations. At the request of the Burkinabe Government, nine Chinese agricultur­al experts, including Chen, were sent to Burkina Faso by the Chinese Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs. Prior to the mission, Chen had worked in Africa in 2011, as an agricultur­al expert in Chad, where he carried out another agricultur­al cooperatio­n project. In September 2018, he was able to go back to Africa to work in Burkina Faso, fulfilling one of his dearest wishes.

“I have a great deal of passion for the agricultur­al cause in Africa. I hope to share with our African partners my knowledge of water management in the field of agricultur­e and the experience I have gained from China, so as to enable them to explore their own agricultur­al developmen­t path specifical­ly tailored to African countries,” Chen told Chinafrica. “Of course, working in Africa also means being away from my family, and I am grateful for their support.”

Huge potential

 ??  ?? A worker is busy on the production line of corn oil at Sanxing Group Co. Ltd. in Zouping, Shandong Province in east China, on March 14
A worker is busy on the production line of corn oil at Sanxing Group Co. Ltd. in Zouping, Shandong Province in east China, on March 14
 ??  ?? A farmer displays sweet corn that he has harvested in Zhangguanz­huang Village in Tangshan, Hebei Province in north China, on July 16
A farmer displays sweet corn that he has harvested in Zhangguanz­huang Village in Tangshan, Hebei Province in north China, on July 16

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