Muscat Daily

How Beijing keeps 1.4bn people fed as virus clogs roads

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Beijing, China - Among the logjammed traffic trying to enter Beijing last week on a highway from the south were dozens of trucks carrying food to the capital, stuck in line as health officials stopped each vehicle to screen the occupants for signs of coronaviru­s.

In the city, supermarke­ts were emptying fast as panicked shoppers rushed to stock up on provisions. Days earlier, the government had closed Hubei province, the epicentre of the new virus and a nexus of transporta­tion in the centre of China.

Keeping the nation’s 1.4bn people fed is one of the ruling Communist Party’s vital challenges, a task that was tough enough even before the virus, due to an outbreak of H1N1 and the effects of decades of pollution and urban expansion.

Within days of the panic buying, authoritie­s had opened special thoroughfa­res for essential food and medical items called ‘Green Passages’.

“Any food price spike could lead to social unrest, and that’s why the government gives this top priority,” said Ma Wenfeng, senior analyst with Beijing Orient Agri-business Consultant

Ltd. “Food is more important, even than masks.”

The measures are working in the capital. A visit to a supermarke­t in Beijing this week showed that fresh vegetables and fruit, which had been the first to go, are now piled high on shelves.

“We have no worries anymore and we can get anything we need,” said Liu Ying, a woman in her 50s who was shopping at a supermarke­t in southern Beijing.

The Green Passages helped ease prices that had spiked in some areas, Lian Weiliang, deputy head of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said in a state broadcast on Monday.

Average vegetable prices were still 11 per cent higher on

Thursday compared with before the holidays.

Because the outbreak spread around the time of the lunar new year festival, many citizens had already stocked enough food for the holidays, so the panic buying at some supermarke­ts was more ‘psychologi­cal’, said Ma at Beijing Orient.

Moreover, the country has huge reserves of basic grains such as rice and wheat, stored around the country in government silos.

China’s National Administra­tion for Food and Strategic Reserves asked local government­s to ensure supplies of grains and edible oil to prevent shortages, panic buying or price spikes, and said it will release items from reserves if necessary. There’s enough rice and wheat in government stockpiles to feed the public for a year, Lian said.

Other products present a bigger challenge. China relies on imports for some foods, especially soybeans and edible oils.

China’s Commerce Ministry said the country will boost imports of meat and other products to meet any deficit, while state-owned food companies Cofco and Sinograin have been ordered to resume production to boost supplies, state media Xinhua reported.

The Asian nation agreed to buy US$40bn to US$50bn a year of US farm products for the next two years, mostly soybeans and meat, as part of the phase-one trade deal signed last month.

Still, the coronaviru­s may temper the nation’s demand for some products. People are eating out less, shunning restaurant­s along with other public places. Dining venues and food stalls are among the biggest users of meats as well as products like palm oil.

About 5km from the supermarke­t is a street of eateries with a small noodle restaurant. The lights are off and a sign on the door says ‘closed’. Owner Ji

Jingping is waiting for the government to tell her when she can open again, though that might not make much difference.

“Even if you open, nobody dares to eat outside,” Ji said. “There are many restaurant­s like us. All the restaurant­s along the street are closed.”

Ji is still paying her 20 employees and 50,000 yuan in monthly rent and says it may be even harder for big restaurant­s with many workers and expensive rents.

The Lunar New Year holiday has ended, but the streets in Beijing remain mostly deserted. Restaurant­s, public parks and cinemas are closed.

Visitors to supermarke­ts and citizens going home to their communitie­s now typically need to get their temperatur­es tested before entering.

To prevent the spread of the virus, most Chinese provinces banned festival celebratio­ns, parties and dining at restaurant­s during the biggest holiday of the year.

More than a dozen cities and provinces extended the Lunar New Year break by a week as part of these efforts.

 ?? (AFP) ?? A woman wearing a protective mask shops in Beijing on February 1
(AFP) A woman wearing a protective mask shops in Beijing on February 1

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