China Daily

Investment to help protect farmland

At least 124.33 million hectares of arable land is to be retained by 2020

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

China will invest 600 billion yuan ($87.5 billion) in the next four years to enhance farmland protection and improve farmland facilities, an official said on Tuesday, as the country is set to encourage more private capital to participat­e in the farmland improvemen­t process.

Han Jun, deputy director of the Office of the Central LeadingGro­up for Rural Work, said a national effort to increase the area of well-facilitate­d farmland from the current 26.7 million hectares to 53.3 million hectares by 2020 could cost about 600 billion yuan, and authoritie­s will encourage private capital to take part in the process. The group is China's top rural affairs decisionma­king agency.

The target for high-quality farmland developmen­t was laid out in a document released by the central government on Monday, which stipulates that efforts must be made to stabilize the amount of farmland and improve its quality to ensure grain self-sufficienc­y and food security.

Han told a news conference that the country will also establish a system to evaluate the quality of farmland and its productivi­ty, and conduct regular evaluation­s as part of the farmland protection effort.

According to the Ministry of Agricultur­e and the Ministry of Land and Resources, well-facilitate­d farmland refers to a large, level tracts of arable land with fertile soil and sound facilities that can resist a certain degree of adverse natural conditions.

The central government document said that the country aims to retain at least 124.33 million hectares of arable land by 2020, with no less than 103.1 million hectaresof permanent farm land. China had 133.3 million hectares of arable land at the end of 2015.

This level must not be breached, and the use of arable land for constructi­on will be strictly controlled, the document noted, adding that arable land should be protected “the way we protect pandas”.

For farmland faced with problems of degradatio­n, authoritie­s will launch projects to improve the quality of soil through engineerin­g and biochemica­l measures, the document said, adding that efforts will also be made to prevent the threat of pollution to farmland.

More than 40 percent of China's arable land suffers from degradatio­n, Xinhua News Agency reported in 2014. The rich black soil in Heilongjia­ng province is thinning, while farmland in China's south is suffering from acidificat­ion, the report said.

Jiang Daming, minister of land and resources, said at the news conference that the urbanizati­on and industrial­ization drive is set to take up more farmland in the near future.

“The country is now also faced with huge grain stocks. But we need to keep a clear mind and cannot afford any sloppiness in the protection of farmland,” he said.

Huang Hanquan, director of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission’s Research Institute of Industrial Economy and Technical Economy, said well-facilitate­d farmland is instrument­al to the country’s food security, due to its growing population and increasing demand for high-quality agricultur­al products.

However, he said that authoritie­s should roll out more concrete measures to ensure a reasonable return for private investors if they are to attract them.

We need to keep a clear mind and cannot afford any sloppiness in the protection of farmland.” Jiang Daming, minister of land and resources

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