Business Day

Pandemic sparks boom for Hong Kong farmers

- Agency Staff Hong Kong /AFP

After a coronaviru­s-fuelled wave of panic-buying briefly left Hong Kong’s supermarke­t shelves bare, residents are turning to local producers for fresh food in a city almost entirely reliant on imports.

Covid-19 has threatened global supply chains as countries impose lockdowns and border restrictio­ns, but for

Hong Kong’s dwindling farming community, the pandemic has sparked a sudden boom in business.

The twice-weekly market at Mapopo Community Farm in suburban northeast Hong Kong has doubled takings since the outbreak became a major public-health issue in February.

“All of a sudden, so many people came to our fair for vegetables that our supply could not meet the demand,” said founder

Becky Au, who gave up her job in the city’s financial heart a decade ago.

The pandemic had prompted more people to rethink what could be produced in Hong Kong, said Mandy Tang, who runs a campaign group that rallies behind the city’s farmers by promoting local produce.

“Just like people are starting to manufactur­e masks and hand sanitisers in Hong Kong, the epidemic is driving everyone to think [about] what can be done with our own hands,” she said.

Hong Kong imports 98% of its vegetables, but it was not always so reliant on food from beyond its borders.

Half a century ago, half of the greens consumed in the city were grown locally.

But that steadily dropped with Hong Kong’s rapid economic growth and urbanisati­on in the 1960s and 1970s. The local products were replaced with cheap imports from mainland China.

“The pandemic makes us realise that more buildings are not making a city happier,” said Lau Hoi-lung, an agricultur­e researcher at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

“Hong Kong must rethink its old habit of relying on shopping around the world and neglecting its own resources to become more resilient to [a] global crisis.”

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