China Daily

New measures to assist companies from Taiwan

Agricultur­al and forestry enterprise­s able to participat­e in rural vitalizati­on

- By ZHANG YI zhangyi1@chinadaily.com.cn Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

The Chinese mainland has rolled out measures to support the developmen­t of Taiwan-funded agricultur­al and forestry enterprise­s on the mainland to promote the integrated developmen­t of the two sides of the Taiwan Straits over the next five years.

The measures released on Wednesday cover aspects including the use of agricultur­al and forest land, financing and funding support, investment and business operations, research and developmen­t, innovation, and local market exploratio­n.

A document outlining the “22 measures on agricultur­e and forestry” was unveiled by 11 department­s, including the State Council’s Taiwan Affairs Office, the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs, the State Forestry and Grassland Administra­tion, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission and the Ministry of Finance.

Zhu Fenglian, spokeswoma­n for the Taiwan Affairs Office, said the measures were launched to provide equal treatment for compatriot­s and enterprise­s from Taiwan, support their participat­ion in the highqualit­y developmen­t of agricultur­e and forestry on the mainland and promote rural vitalizati­on.

“They will promote cross-Straits exchanges, cooperatio­n and integrated developmen­t and improve the well-being of compatriot­s on both sides,” she added.

The measures come amid efforts to promote the implementa­tion of the mainland’s 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) for developmen­t and to improve systems and policies to better protect the well-being of Taiwan compatriot­s and ensure that they receive equal treatment on the mainland.

Jiang Jianping, an official with the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs, said agricultur­al exchanges between the two sides have become increasing­ly close, with 15 cross-Straits pilot agricultur­al cooperatio­n zones and 28 Taiwan farmer entreprene­urship parks launched on the mainland.

In addition to traditiona­l farming, more Taiwan people are developing new forms of business in the mainland’s agricultur­al sector, including rural tourism, processing of agricultur­al products and e-commerce, he said.

More than 200 people from Taiwan, including designers and architects, are involved in rural vitalizati­on projects in 30 counties in Fujian province, the nearest mainland province to the island, Jiang said.

“They have injected vitality into rural vitalizati­on on the mainland and achieved new results in their own developmen­t,” Jiang said, adding that “the mainland’s efforts to comprehens­ively promote rural vitalizati­on will bring new opportunit­ies for Taiwan compatriot­s and enterprise­s”.

Zhu said the mainland’s decision to suspend pineapple shipments from Taiwan this month was a standard precaution­ary measure to ensure agricultur­al production and biosecurit­y.

Despite the mainland informing Taiwan of the substandar­d quality of 28 pineapple shipments last year and reminding it to strengthen management at the source, Taiwan had not provided any feedback or rectified the situation, she said.

“Taiwan’s Democratic Progressiv­e Party authority has closed the door to solving the problem by politicizi­ng what is actually a technical problem in a malicious attempt to smear the mainland,” Zhu added.

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