China Daily

Harvest time:

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

Monks from the Shaolin Temple, renowned for martial arts, harvest wheat from a field near the temple in Henan province on Sunday. The temple has more than 8 hectares of land that produce enough wheat to support about 400 monks.

Amid intervals of kung fu and meditation, monks from the Shaolin Temple in Dengfeng are busy this month harvesting wheat, one of the bumper crops seen across China this summer.

China is predicting another increase in the yield of summer crops as the harvest is more than 80 percent complete nationwide, the Ministry of Agricultur­e said on Monday.

“It seems a bumper harvest is a certainty. The wheat output

21.67 million hectares Area of summer-crop farmland, an increase of 66,667 hectares from last year

is expected to hit a record high based on a survey of the Ministry of Agricultur­e and statistics from local government­s,” Han Changfu, minister of agricultur­e, told China Central Television.

Henan province, where the temple is located, is one of the

136.6 million tons Yield of summer crops in 2014, up 3.6 percent year-on-year

country’s major summer crop cultivatin­g provinces, Dahe Daily reported on Sunday.

An increase in cultivated land and yields, plus sweeping rainfalls across most parts of the country in April, have contribute­d to the boost in summer crops this year, especially winter wheat, which is seen as essential to the country’s grain security, the ministry said.

A stable agricultur­al policy and more investment­s in science and technology also contribute­d to the increase in yields, Han said.

The country’s current policy of providing a minimum purchase price for wheat has motivated farmers, and guidance on pesticides has reduced losses.

The total summer-crop farmland reached 21.67 million hectares this year, an increase of 66,667 hectares from last year, according to the ministry.

In Shaanxi province, the yield of summer crops could increase by 10 percent over last year thanks to favorable weather conditions and the applicatio­n of agricultur­al technology, local media reported.

In China, the harvest of wheat and early-season rice began at the end of May and will continue until early July.

China’s yield of summer crops grew 3.6 percent to 136.6 million tons in 2014, nearly a quarter of which came from Henan province, Xinhua News Agency reported.

The ministry said it will turn its attention next to the harvest of autumn crops, which could be challenged by a number of factors, including El Nino, a warming of sea-surface temperatur­es in the Pacific.

The China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion said it is expecting a moderate El Nino to affect the country this year, which could cause heavy rainfall in the south and droughts in the north.

 ?? CHEN LIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ??
CHEN LIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY

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