China Daily

Sinograin eyes high- tech to ensure food supply

- By ZHONG NAN

China Grain Reserves Group Ltd ( Sinograin), the country’s largest grain storage and transporta­tion company, pledged to apply more digital technologi­es and enhance cross- industry cooperatio­n during the 14 th Five- Year Plan ( 2021- 25) period to help ensure national food security, said its top executive.

Deng Yiwu, chairman of the centrally- administer­ed State- owned enterprise, said that thanks to support from a system of storage technologi­es targeting specific ecoregions and varieties of grains, smart technologi­es have already been applied to the company’s business operations. It now runs the world’s largest internet of things network in the global grain storage sector.

The company will continue to carry out standardiz­ed and technology­based warehousin­g management to guarantee the authentici­ty and high quality of all kinds of grain storage, Deng said.

The Beijing- based group currently operates more than 960 grain, oil and cotton storage facilities, with a combined storage capacity of nearly 100 million metric tons. Its warehousin­g facilities are made up of large house granaries, shallow bins, tower silos and various oil storage tankers, with main varieties of reserves including wheat, rice, corn, soybeans, cotton and edible oils.

Even though emergencie­s such as the COVID- 19 pandemic have had an impact on the country’s economic growth as well as changes in grain supply and demand in certain provinces, Sinograin has actively worked with grain processing companies across China to cumulative­ly put more than 100 million tons of grain and oil into the market, thus ensuring sufficient and reliable grain supply and helping stabilize food prices.

“Strengthen­ing scientific and technologi­cal innovation is an inevitable requiremen­t for us to respond to the new situation of internatio­nal competitio­n and implementi­ng an innovation- driven developmen­t strategy,” he said, adding that it is an inevitable requiremen­t for implementi­ng the new national food security strategy, and promoting the transforma­tion and upgrading of the grain industry.

Based on its role in implementi­ng macroecono­mic regulatory policy, Sinograin — supported by more than 40,000 employees and 30 subsidiari­es — undertakes the tasks of grain and oil procuremen­t, sales, allocation and storage.

Guided by government policies such as the country’s first policy document of the year, the company ensures that: farmers can sell their grain at reasonable prices; domestic grain supply meets market demand; grain prices are basically stable, and farmers’ economic interests and national grain security are guaranteed.

It also sells central grain and oil reserves that are nearing expiration dates, and purchases grain and oil up to certain quality standards in accordance with government plans each year.

Eager to stabilize the agricultur­al sector and harness the role of rural areas, China’s first policy document of the year contains scaled- up measures to ensure that the country can win the battle against poverty across the board as well as strengthen weak links in rural areas and certain agricultur­al production areas.

This is the 17 th consecutiv­e year in which the document — issued annually by the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council — has focused on grain production and rural issues.

In realizing food security, China will diversify import channels, increase imports of agricultur­al products that meet domestic demand and adjust and improve a minimum- purchase- price system for rice and wheat, according to the document.

In addition to signing business contracts and cooperatio­n agreements with the world’s major agricultur­al goods traders — including United States- based Cargill Inc and France’s Louis Dreyfus Co — to import soybeans in recent years, the company will continue to adapt to new internatio­nal economic and trade conditions and actively adjust its source for imports of certain agricultur­al products, especially with markets taking part in the Belt and Road Initiative, Sinograin President Chi Jingtao said.

China’s summer grain output reached a historic high of 142.8 million tons this year despite the COVID- 19 pandemic, said the National Bureau of Statistics.

The bumper harvest laid a solid foundation for this year’s food supply, which gives China strong confidence in its goal of building a moderately prosperous society in all respects and winning the battle against poverty, said Zheng Fengtian, a professor of rural developmen­t at Beijing- based Renmin University of China.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A Sinograin employee checks quality of rice at the company’s depot in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, in September.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A Sinograin employee checks quality of rice at the company’s depot in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, in September.

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