China Daily

Lawmaker forges path ahead for agricultur­al modernizat­ion drive

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

A lawmaker who transforme­d her father’s farming operation in Jiangsu province with smart technologi­es seven years ago is now attempting to help more young people become next-generation farmers.

“It’s not an easy job to engage in farming,” said Wei Qiao, chairwoman of Jiangsu Runguo Agricultur­al Developmen­t Co, her father’s brainchild, in Zhenjiang.

“You need to make huge investment­s with very slow financial return,” she said, adding that burnishing the appeal of being a farmer has always been on her mind.

Elected last year as a deputy to the National People’s Congress, the country’s top legislatur­e, Wei suggested that colleges should work closely with agricultur­al companies to train agronomist­s with hands-on knowledge of production who can help drive the country’s agricultur­al modernizat­ion.

The 42-year-old also called for stronger backing for young farming talent, such as arranging tutors for them, providing training opportunit­ies and giving them a lump sum subsidy for choosing to work in related jobs.

The suggestion received attention from the NPC’s agricultur­al and rural affairs committee, and the central government.

In July, a group of officials from the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs arrived in Zhenjiang. They had a lengthy exchange with Wei and vowed to work with authoritie­s in education, employment and the banking industry to realize her proposal.

“As a representa­tive of new farmers, I regard it as my mission to help blaze a trail for promoting high-quality developmen­t of Chinese agricultur­e,” she said.

In 2017, Wei, who has a master’s degree in soil science, quit her job as an assistant researcher at the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research in Beijing.

She and her husband, a postdoctor­al researcher at prestigiou­s Peking University with a doctorate in agronomy, returned to her hometown, where Wei’s father, Wei Yunfeng, ran a farm of some 1,700 hectares.

The couple took over the operation and experiment­ed with technologi­es to bolster farming efficiency. With pesticide-spraying drones, a digital farmland monitoring system and other innovation­s, they helped reduce the labor required and increased the otherwise razor-thin profit margins from growing wheat, rice and rapeseed.

“A drone can help spray 20 hectares, and one person can operate two such drones at the same time,” she said.

In 2022, Wei was recruited as a part-time professor at Jiangsu University in Zhenjiang, which is known for majors related to farming equipment and engineerin­g.

As part of the program, she has brought many of her students to work in the fields, learning to operate drones and adapting their body clocks to the rhythm of reallife farming, which sometimes requires them to arrive in the field at 5 am. She also negotiated with the college to move major exams to slack winter seasons to allow for field studies in the busy harvest season in summer.

“It is pretty much like swimming,” she said. “You have to jump into the water to learn.”

Figures from the agricultur­e ministry show that some 12 million urban-educated people had returned to their rural roots to start businesses by the end of 2022, including those engaged in agricultur­e. The number is estimated to exceed 15 million by next year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong