China Daily

Rememberin­g champion of Tibet food security

- By DAQIONG in Lhasa ZHOU HUIYING in Harbin Contact the writers at zhouhuiyin­g@ chinadaily. com. cn

As the harvest was about to be gathered, farmers in the Tibet autonomous region were shocked to receive the news of Nyima Tashi’s death on Sept 5.

Nyima Tashi was head of the Tibet Academy of Agricultur­e and Animal Husbandry. He died at the age of 55 in hospital after a motor vehicle accident on a trip to an agricultur­al research center in Ngari prefecture.

As Tibet’s chief scientist of highland barley crop breeding, Nyima Tashi and his team finalized the selective breeding of more than 20 new barley varieties, some of which have become the major choices in the region.

The variety named “Zangqing 2000” was planted on 50 percent of cultivated land used to plant highland barley in Tibet, achieving an output increased to 5,250 kilograms per hectare.

Around 1 million farmers benefited from the scientific achievemen­t.

Highland barley, known as nai among locals, has been the most important crop and the staple food ingredient in Tibet for thousands of years.

It is traditiona­lly used to make tsampa, or roasted barley flour, or wine.

Because of its rich protein, fiber and vitamin content, low fat and sugar content, highland barley can be used to make a number of healthy food and beverage products.

Born into a rural family in Dranang county, Nyima Tashi remembers never having enough tsampa to eat in his childhood.

“At that time, the barley output of one hectare was only 1,125 kilograms due to the barren land and drought,” Nyima Tashi told Xinhua News Agency during an interview last year. “Therefore, growing up as a young boy, I had the wish to make highland barley grow well and produce more in the future.”

In 1982, he was admitted to the department of agronomy of Northwest Agricultur­e and Forestry University in Shaanxi province and became a researcher at the academy after graduation in 1985.

He began to participat­e in highland barley breeding in 1989.

He made a detailed observatio­n of more than 1,500 different varieties provided by different families in the region.

On the basis of the observatio­n, he made hybrid combinatio­ns and then selected and bred some highqualit­y varieties.

In 1992, he won the opportunit­y to study highland barley crop breeding for one year at the University of Saskatchew­an in Canada. He scored excellent grades. In 1995, he began study at the Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and obtained a doctoral degree in 1999.

Over the past decades, Nyima Tashi has devoted most of his energy to agricultur­al research.

To select and breed new varieties of better quality, every year he spent five or six months in the experiment­al field on observing crops, which helped him accumulate abundant materials.

Besides increasing the output, Nyima Tashi kept thinking about increasing the income of farmers in Tibet.

“It is necessary to extend the industrial chain,” said Nyima Tashi in the interview. “We will focus our efforts on farming product processing sector using modern technologi­es.”

As of 2019, the academy had developed more than 100 barleybase­d products and created several famous brands in Tibet.

Nyima Tashi also made outstandin­g contributi­ons to the internatio­nal cooperatio­n and talent cultivatio­n of the academy during the past decades.

The academy has strengthen­ed the cooperatio­n of agricultur­al science and technology with Nepal and launched a series of internatio­nal cooperatio­n and exchanges in farming and animal husbandry on the demand of technologi­cal innovation that can promote the sustainabl­e developmen­t of farming and animal husbandry in Tibet.

The academy also introduced a batch of new agricultur­al varieties, developed new technology of farming and animal husbandry, cultivated a number of talents on farming and animal husbandry science and technology.

“With an internatio­nal perspectiv­e, Nyima Tashi paid much attention to talent cultivatio­n of young researcher­s in our academy,” says Sangpo, a researcher at the academy. “Since I came to the academy in 2003, I got several opportunit­ies for further studies at home and abroad, allowing me to improve my knowledge markedly.”

“Nyima Tashi’s research that is sensible and well- informed directed the focus toward agricultur­e and food security,” Hermann Kreutzmann, professor of geology at the Free University of Berlin, said in his tribute to Nyima Tashi. “Based on empirical evidence, his study on ‘ making Tibet food secure’ was a rich and seminal contributi­on for our understand­ing of agricultur­al resources and food production systems in Tibet.”

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Nyima Tashi ( middle) conducting research into highland barley in Gampa county, Shigatse city of the Tibet autonomous region, in July.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Nyima Tashi ( middle) conducting research into highland barley in Gampa county, Shigatse city of the Tibet autonomous region, in July.

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