China Today (English)

Who Will Triumph in the Horticultu­re Industry?

- By staff reporter SUN CHAO

Over the past decades China’s horticultu­ral industry has developed rapidly, benefittin­g people’s livelihood.

THE World Horticultu­ral Exhibition held 20 years ago in Kunming catalyzed the developmen­t of China’s horticultu­ral industry. The Internatio­nal Horticultu­ral Exhibition 2019, held in Beijing from April to October this year, has set up a platform for horticultu­ral cooperatio­n and exchange among many countries, and also serves as a stage to showcase the progress of China’s horticultu­ral industry.

China is one of the most important cradles of horticultu­ral plants in the world, as a slew of horticultu­ral plants have been cultivated here for more than 3,000 years. The rich variety of plants and the sophistica­ted traditiona­l horticultu­ral methods are unparallel­ed globally. Since the reform and openingup of China, with the constant adjustment of the agricultur­al industrial structure in China, the horticultu­ral industry with fruits, vegetables, tea, flowers, traditiona­l Chinese medicine, silkworm breeding, and mulberry growing as pillars, has developed rapidly, benefittin­g the people’s livelihood.

Horticultu­ral Consumptio­n Growing

Zhao Xiaolan, a 60-year-old resident of Tianjin, built a 20-square-meter terrace on the top of her house as a vegetable garden, in which she grows tomatoes, chili peppers and cucumbers. The output of each season was able to satisfy the daily needs of the whole family.

Zhao Xiaolan’s vegetable seedlings are purchased via the Internet. After some time, a lot of neighbors in her community began to grow vegetables on their terraces just like her. Neighbors gathered and excit

edly exchanged experience­s of planting potted vegetables, and shared vegetables grown by themselves.

With the continuous refinement of gardening-related products such as green planting, outdoor lighting, and decorative works of art, the demand for horticultu­ral products has gradually increased. The change in consumer focus has resulted in an increase in horticultu­ral products and services, and the business forms have diversifie­d.

Zhang Yu, who resides in Miyun District, Beijing, turned his vegetable plot into a garden last year, growing more than a dozen kinds of flowers, such as roses, peonies, and tulips. Fruit trees were also planted, and a miniature stone-made mountain was placed, transformi­ng his yard into a miniature garden. He noted that as he turned old, he became less capable of cultivatin­g land, and consequent­ly turned the vegetable plot into a garden, which looked pleasant. Now Zhang Yu’s miniature garden has become a place where relatives and friends often meet.

More young people have started to order flowers. The flower ordering services include monthly packages and home delivery once a week. Customers can

The huge population base and the level of economic and social developmen­t make China a big market of family horticultu­re.

pick flowers and pay via WeChat, the whole process taking only two minutes. For most urban consumers, the price of ordering flowers is favorable, and the order and delivery process are also convenient. This in turn has become a new fashionabl­e trend with young people.

The huge population base and the level of economic and social developmen­t make China a big market of family horticultu­re. Although the consumptio­n of horticultu­ral products is increasing, the developmen­t of the horticultu­ral industry needs cooperatio­n from multiple sectors. Li Li, an official of the National Agricultur­al Technology Promotion Service Center of the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs, believes that social awareness of the horticultu­ral industry should be enhanced, and more measures to improve horticultu­ral production and consumptio­n are needed.

Flowers as a Medium to Drive Regional Developmen­t

In the early spring of 2019, in the greenhouse­s of the lily production base in Donghai County, Jiangsu Province, Li Bingjian was picking budding lilies. This year, the market is in good condition and the price is good as well. More than 10,000 greenhouse­s for freshcut flowers have been built in Donghai, with the total area of 2,000 hectares. The county is now the largest lily production base with the most diverse varieties in Jiangsu, producing more than 500 million freshcut flowers per year, and boosting the income of 2,000 rural households.

Since the 1980s, the planting area and output of horticultu­ral plants in China have been increasing continuous­ly, and the scale of production has been expanding. In addition, with scientific and technologi­cal progress over recent years, the output per unit area has skyrockete­d.

The vigorous developmen­t of horticultu­ral industry has increased farmers’ income and agricultur­al efficiency, balanced the trade between China and some other countries, and become one of the important industries of the agricultur­al and rural economy.

“Flowers not only beautify the environmen­t, but

have also made me rich,” Zhang Aiguo, a florist in Sanpu Village, said with contentmen­t. He began planting flowers with his parents in 2008. Over the past decade, his greenhouse­s increased from four to 20, and he also become a broker, building a cold storage of nearly 300 square meters to preserve freshcut flowers and bulbs. His annual income nears RMB one million, which has inspired more than 20 farmers around him to grow fresh-cut flowers.

Speaking of the developmen­t of the horticultu­ral industry in Donghai, Gao Meifeng, the county magistrate, said that Donghai, with its favorable climate and soil conditions, had further promoted the structural reform of the agricultur­al supply side and guided farmers to develop flower planting. The county integrates all kinds of funds to build hydropower, ditches, and other supporting facilities for the base. In addition to this, it cooperates with financial institutio­ns to help the villagers access financial support including loans. The county agricultur­al committee has also developed an agricultur­al technology work app, set up the “Donghai Flower WeChat Group,” and invited technical experts to answer questions in a timely manner. The county’s Shuangdian Town has planted more than 1,000 hectares of flowers, and “Shuangdian Lily” has been granted CGIIA (China Geographic Indication­s Industry Associatio­n) certificat­ion.

Donghai holds flower exhibition­s every two years, and has set up distributi­on centers in more than 20 large and medium-sized cities throughout the country to achieve a seamless connection between production and the constantly expanding market space. Gao Meifeng pointed out that at present, 60 percent of fresh-cut lilies in Shanghai are from Donghai.

At the same time, flowers are used in Donghai as a way to give full play to the advantages of its lakes and hot springs, and accelerate the developmen­t of tourism. The constructi­on of Shuangxi Lake lily-themed park in the west of the county, which integrates beautiful flower decoration­s and tourism, not only improves the city’s facilities, but also provides a display and exchange platform for the fresh-cut flower industry, and upgrades the overall industrial level.

Constantly tapping the potential of agricultur­al developmen­t and building a strong modern agricultur­al county, Donghai has formed six leading flower industries, such as Shuangdian fresh-cut flowers and Huangchuan strawberri­es. Donghai has also launched the strategy of rural revitaliza­tion, which will organicall­y combine rural tourism and eco-tourism oriented agricultur­e to develop local features, promote integratio­n of tourism and agricultur­e, and build a unique rural tourism industrial ecosystem. The booming rural tourism will bring more business opportunit­ies to Donghai, and enable more farmers to live a prosperous life.

Starting from 2016, China began building towns with distinctiv­e local features. By 2020, it will cultivate about 1,000 such towns. Some of them will use flowers as a characteri­stic industry to produce a variety of high-value-added products, and greatly extend and expand the flower industry chain.

Over the past 20 years, with the rapid developmen­t of China’s flower industry, the variety of flower products has become increasing­ly abundant. Freshcut flowers, potted flowers, garden plants, and other new products have continuous­ly emerged, making China the world’s largest flower production base, an important flower consumer, and a key flower import and export country. Ornamental plants account for half of the flower industry, with their planting area accounting for about 57 percent. The production area of seedlings and flowers is more than two million hectares, and more than 40 billion seedlings are produced annually, with an annual output value of more than RMB 450 billion.

Cultivatio­n facilities have also developed from bamboo sheds and solar greenhouse­s to intelligen­tenvironme­nt-controlled multi-span greenhouse­s. More and more enterprise­s have adopted advanced technologi­es such as fertigatio­n and tidal irrigation for flower planting. At the same time, the planting level has been continuous­ly improved, the mainstream potted flower planting technology has matured, and become more standardiz­ed, and the quality of some enterprise­s’ products is of the internatio­nal level.

With advanced cultivatio­n techniques, continuous supply in all seasons has been achieved. It not only guarantees the needs of residents, but farmers in differing regions also have gained advanced experience­s during the developmen­t.

Li Li cited as an example that the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs launched a modern agricultur­al industry technology system in 2007, which included 13 horticultu­ral technology sub-systems, such as citrus, apple, vegetables, tea, silkworm breeding,

and mulberry growing. Each sub-system has a certain number of scientists and regional comprehens­ive experiment­al stations, and promotes the applicatio­n of scientific research results through research and demonstrat­ion of experiment­al stations.

Maintainin­g the Momentum

Historical­ly, the horticultu­ral industry in China was based on the household contract responsibi­lity system, that was dominated by family-based small-scale operations. Li Li believes that although the pace of land transfer and cooperatio­n in some areas has gradually increased with the accelerati­on of urbanizati­on and agricultur­al modernizat­ion, the operation of family farms and loose farmer cooperativ­e organizati­ons still dominate operationa­l modes. Taking vegetables as an example, 60 percent of Chinese vegetable farms are smaller than one hectare in size, while only about three percent are larger than 6.7 hectares.

In recent years, the comparativ­e benefits of

“China will take the Internatio­nal Horticultu­ral Expo as an opportunit­y to vigorously promote the openingup and developmen­t of its horticultu­ral industry.”

horticultu­ral crops, especially fruits and vegetables, have declined due to the sharp increase in production costs.

However, Li Li is optimistic about the prospects of China’s horticultu­ral industry. She said that compared with the three major grain crops, the horticultu­ral industry still has higher profits, and remains the leading industry for poverty alleviatio­n and rural revitaliza­tion.

In Li Li’s view, the horticultu­ral crop industry should take the supply-side structural reform and the adjustment of planting structure as an opportunit­y to optimize industry structure, reduce inefficien­t supply, increase effective supply, and improve supply quality; It should introduce green production modes, and accelerate the promotion of green technology with the priority on resource preservati­on and environmen­tal protection; it should develop a batch of horticultu­ral products with regional characteri­stics in combinatio­n with the creation of areas of competitiv­e edge on certain agricultur­al products; it also should adjust industrial structure, develop make-to-order production, cultivate the processing industry, and extend the industrial chain.

“China will take the Internatio­nal Horticultu­ral Expo as an opportunit­y to vigorously promote the opening-up and developmen­t of its horticultu­ral industry.” Li Li pointed out that the horticultu­ral industries of various countries including planting fruits, vegetables, and flowers, both competitiv­e and complement­ary. The Chinese government will increase internatio­nal exchanges, cooperatio­n, and developmen­t of the horticultu­ral industry under the principle of mutual benefit and win-win results, and upgrade horticultu­ral trade.

Li Li also stressed the importance of giving full play to the comparativ­e advantages of horticultu­ral crops in various countries, promoting the trade of intellectu­al property rights and production technology exchanges, strengthen­ing the interactio­n between the department­s in charge of production and marketing, catalyzing the “going out and bringing in” of superior horticultu­ral products all over the country, sharing the developmen­t opportunit­ies brought by the Belt and Road Initiative, promoting the sustainabl­e developmen­t of the global horticultu­ral industry, and constantly striving to increase farmers’ income and the connectivi­ty of markets.

 ??  ?? Donghai County has set up production and marketing centers in more than 20 large and medium-sized cities nationwide.
Donghai County has set up production and marketing centers in more than 20 large and medium-sized cities nationwide.
 ??  ?? Inside the greenhouse of the lily production base in Donghai County.
Inside the greenhouse of the lily production base in Donghai County.
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 ??  ?? The Flower Base of Changji Agricultur­al Science Park in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
The Flower Base of Changji Agricultur­al Science Park in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

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