China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Growth center

Under the innovative framework of the Sino-German Agricultur­al Centre, agricultur­al cooperatio­n between the two countries has seen rapid growth and produced many beneficial outcomes

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China and Germany, as all-round strategic partners, have always maintained a healthy momentum in bilateral relations. Agricultur­al cooperatio­n has been a key part of bilateral ties. In recent years, under the innovative framework of the Sino-German Agricultur­al Centre, their agricultur­al cooperatio­n has seen rapid growth and spawned fruitful outcomes, becoming a model for agricultur­al cooperatio­n between China and other European nations.

Based on consensuse­s reached between leaders from both sides, in 2015 the Chinese Ministry of Agricultur­e (now the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs) and the German Federal Ministry of Food and Agricultur­e jointly set up the Sino-German Agricultur­al Centre, with the aim of building a unified platform for agricultur­al cooperatio­n between the two countries and providing necessary support and resources for bilateral pragmatic cooperatio­n in various areas.

The Sino-German Agricultur­al Centre represents a major innovation in bilateral agricultur­al cooperatio­n, and has proved to be highly effective in promoting bilateral agricultur­al policy dialogue, exchange between businesses, the developmen­t of platforms for science and research collaborat­ion and the implementa­tion of demonstrat­ion programs.

The Sino-German Agricultur­al Policy Dialogue sheds light on policy rationale and design of policy instrument­s to facilitate the framing of agricultur­al and rural developmen­t policies. Thanks to mutual visits and consultati­ons, expert groups from both countries have conducted in-depth exchanges in ecological agricultur­e, environmen­tally friendly animal husbandry and smart agricultur­e. Despite the COVID-19 pandemic wreaking havoc worldwide, the two sides have kept up their momentum by maintainin­g close exchanges and active engagement via videoconfe­rences.

The Agri-Food Business Dialogue has been a main driver of Sino-German agricultur­al cooperatio­n, being an open platform for closer exchanges. It has ensured the active participat­ion of German companies such as Bayer, Syngenta and BASF and national pilot zones in China such as the Yangling Agricultur­al High-Tech Industries Demonstrat­ion Zone in Shaanxi province and Sino-German Eco-park in Qingdao, Shandong province. Over 100 Chinese and German enterprise­s have used the platform for partnering, networking and promotion.

The cooperatio­n platform on science and research, focusing on cutting-edge areas of modern agricultur­al technology, has served as a pillar for further coordinati­on and exchanges in science and research. Since its establishm­ent, the center has enabled closer and more effective interactio­n and exchanges in areas such as control of the spotted wing Drosophila (a major pest species), treatment of pollutants from animal husbandry and poultry, digital agricultur­e and strengthen­ing food security.

The demonstrat­ion programs, which have brought together leading equipment, technologi­es and management in the agricultur­al sector, have shown the way for the growth of modern agricultur­e through demonstrat­ion and training.

The Sino-German Crop Production and Agro-technology Demonstrat­ion Park, located in the Huanghai State Farm in Jiangsu province, has achieved preliminar­y results in the piloting of sustainabl­e crop production practices. Compared to traditiona­l local practice, the new practice has reduced the use of fertilizer­s by 34.1 percent, seeds by 45.8 percent, pesticide by 21.5 percent, water by 63 percent and energy consumptio­n by 15.8 percent.

In 2019, employing the direct drilling technique, the park’s wheat yield reached 10,320 kilograms per hectare, and rice yield 15,883.5 kg per hectare — a new record for machine-planted rice in the province. The park has hosted 72 special training sessions, including those in virtual forms, benefiting over 20,000 agricultur­al practition­ers.

The Fifth Plenary Session of the 19th Communist Party of China Central Committee made it clear that China will embark on a new developmen­t phase to comprehens­ively build a modern socialist country and expedite steps to foster a new developmen­t paradigm with domestic circulatio­n as the mainstay and domestic and internatio­nal circulatio­ns reinforcin­g each other.

Going forward, China’s efforts to foster this new developmen­t paradigm will produce a wide range of opportunit­ies, which will be taken to further explore the efficiency of Sino-German bilateral cooperatio­n in areas of food and agricultur­e. The focus will be in these three areas:

First, the countries will further deepen mutual learning and exchanges on rural developmen­t. China is pushing forward rural revitaliza­tion across the board and accelerati­ng steps to modernize its agricultur­e and rural areas. Germany, meanwhile, has taken the lead globally in ecological, smart agricultur­e and rural environmen­tal management, and many of its practices are worth learning. China will draw on the experience­s of Germany in its fostering of high-quality agricultur­e and revitaliza­tion of rural areas.

Second, the two sides will make all-out efforts to develop the Sino-German Agricultur­al Centre. The center is the main platform for agricultur­al cooperatio­n and carries out a raft of high-quality cooperatio­n programs in key areas including smart agricultur­e, prevention and control of plant and animal pathogens, protection of the rural environmen­t, rural developmen­t and rural governance and training modern agricultur­al personnel.

Third, the countries will enhance collaborat­ive innovation. They will push forward the demonstrat­ion programs for their agricultur­al cooperatio­n and collaborat­ively bring innovation in areas such as balancing costs, production and the environmen­t and the sustainabl­e developmen­t of agricultur­e. The programs aim to explore high-quality green developmen­t models and show examples, to contribute to across-the-board rural revitaliza­tion and modernizat­ion of agricultur­e and rural areas.

The authors are from the Foreign Economic Cooperatio­n Center of the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs of China. The authors contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

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 ?? WU HEPING / FOR CHINA DAILY ??
WU HEPING / FOR CHINA DAILY

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