Global Times

Farmers in Xinjiang scramble to protect crops amid heat waves

- By GT staff reporters

As abnormal heat waves continue sweeping across Northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region during a critical growing season, farmers and local government­s are taking swift actions to protect cotton and other crops, mostly by increasing irrigation, industry sources told the Global Times on Tuesday.

The impact of the hot weather varies among regions and may reduce the size of the harvest in some areas. But most local people interviewe­d by the Global Times said that the impact of the hot weather on cotton growing has been limited so far.

A deputy manager surnamed Zhang at a fabrics company in Yuli county of Xinjiang’s Bazhou said that although Yuli had received several high temperatur­e alerts, the heat didn’t last too long and the region was also safe from natural disasters like mudslides so far.

High temperatur­es were accelerati­ng glacial melting in mountainou­s areas, and this was leading to natural disasters such as flash floods, mudslides and landslides in many places, according to China Media Group ( CMG).

“The cotton bolls are growing very well now. So far, the hot weather didn’t exert any large impact on the plants,” Zhang said.

Liu Haifeng, CEO of Urumqi- based China Colored- Cotton Group, said that the heat would be “no problem” if proper measures were taken.

Local farmers said that more frequent irrigation would keep the cotton bolls intact. Zhang, for example, said that local growers have started to irrigate their fields once every seven days, compared with once every 10 days in the past.

Local officials are also lending support for local farmers to tide over the heat waves.

However, some said that water has become a problem after the irrigation frequency increased.

A manager of a textile company in Aksu told the Global Times that he heard from a cotton field owner in Awati that farmers used to irrigate the fields once a week at this time of year, while this year they need to water the crops at least once every three days, and because of increasing irrigation frequency, water supplies are getting very tight.

“A breakeven point could be reached if one mu ( 0.067 hectares) of cotton fields could yield 400 kilograms of cotton. But this year it’s very hard to reach that yield due to the heat, and I guess local government­s may offer subsidies ( to cotton farmers),” the manager said.

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