I think the state of Chinese agricultural and particular seed industry deserves it's own topique. This has been a neglected area in the popular minds in the last 20-30 years.
Part 1/ 2 (no more than 1000 words for each post, should repair this limitation)
Looking to reduce its reliance on foreign suppliers for critical foodstuffs, China is growing more innovative and bold. The first in this two-part series looks at the importance of seeds and agritech advancements.
During his 33 years of research across 23 African countries, 73-year-old Chinese agricultural scientist Jia Yinsuo collected 1,566 varieties of corn seeds to use in the breeding of better corn back home.
After returning to China in 2005, Jia spearheaded the Ministry of Agriculture’s seed resources project, then developed and released higher-yielding corn varieties – growing up to 1,500kg per mu (0.07 hectares, 0.16 acres) a year, by crossbreeding domestic and African varieties.
“We have used American corn resources too much already, and I think making full use of African seed resources to improve our own seed breeding is a sure way to go,” Jia said.
Owing to faster agricultural development in the United States, China’s corn production per mu – a Chinese unit of measurement – has fallen further behind the US in the past decade, currently at 314kg (692 pounds) less per mu from 200kg in 2005.
“About 70 per cent of China’s corn seed comes from the US,” said Jia, who is also chairman of the African Academy of Sciences China branch. “Western countries, especially the US, have created a serious choke point on our seed resources.”
Escalating tensions between China and the US-led West have sounded the alarm over amid weak competition involving indigenous seeds – a major reason that China relies so heavily on food imports. Experts have called on Beijing to diversify its seed imports, increase collaboration between universities and companies, and employ smarter breeding techniques.
The world’s second-biggest economy needed to strengthen its agricultural technology and diversify its seed suppliers to address the international “choke point” in its agricultural sector, including the livestock industry and the breeding of high-quality fruits and vegetables, according to Chinese academics. “Our agricultural technology gap, particularly with the US, can’t be allowed to widen any further,” Deng Yan, a professor at Guangdong Ocean University’s School of Management, said at a seed conference in Hainan in early April. “Otherwise, it would put China at greater risk of containment by the US.”
Deng said that the tensions between the world’s two largest economies were putting immense strain on the domestic seed industry, leading to a decline in the availability of high-quality fruit and vegetable seeds, and the livestock breeding sector was also severely affected. Deng said that seed concerns had shifted from food quantity to quality amid restrictions on the import of high-end variety seeds.
“China’s high-end seed development capability is poor, and it’s a technological problem,” he said. China has nearly eight times more authorised domestic breeds of crop seeds than the US and the Netherlands combined, with 7,323 breeds authorised domestically between 2010 and 2019, according to data compiled by Deng from the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants.
“But in terms of international market share, China’s seed-competitiveness ranking quickly slips from first to 15th,” he said. He said China’s seed exports only had a 1.51 per cent share of the global market, compared with the Netherlands’ 20.47 per cent and the US’ 13.91 per cent. “The US has more than 2,000 seed patents from just one company, Cordova, while the total number of all patents in China combined is only 1,225, not to mention that over half of them come from a single state-owned enterprise, without which the figures would only get worse,” Deng said. To address this problem, China needs to foster a mutually beneficial relationship between businesses and research institutes, Deng contends. But the lack of collaboration between companies and research institutes has disrupted the commercial seed industry.
“In China, agricultural technology is certainly the forte of research institutes, and companies are less capable of solving seed-security issues,” Deng said. China is the second-largest seed consumer in the world, behind the US, with the market potential estimated at more than 120 billion yuan (US$16.6 billion). It had a seed-trade deficit of US$350 million in 2021, according to a report released in October by Vcbeat, an agricultural technology platform in Beijing.
Non paywall source:
Part 1/ 2 (no more than 1000 words for each post, should repair this limitation)
China’s seeds, in an agricultural choke hold, must see breeding advancements
- Experts call on Beijing to diversify seed imports, increase collaboration between universities and companies, and employ smarter
China’s agricultural technology gap, particularly with the US, has widened over the years, and it raises the risk of containment
Looking to reduce its reliance on foreign suppliers for critical foodstuffs, China is growing more innovative and bold. The first in this two-part series looks at the importance of seeds and agritech advancements.China’s agricultural technology gap, particularly with the US, has widened over the years, and it raises the risk of containment
During his 33 years of research across 23 African countries, 73-year-old Chinese agricultural scientist Jia Yinsuo collected 1,566 varieties of corn seeds to use in the breeding of better corn back home.
After returning to China in 2005, Jia spearheaded the Ministry of Agriculture’s seed resources project, then developed and released higher-yielding corn varieties – growing up to 1,500kg per mu (0.07 hectares, 0.16 acres) a year, by crossbreeding domestic and African varieties.
“We have used American corn resources too much already, and I think making full use of African seed resources to improve our own seed breeding is a sure way to go,” Jia said.
Owing to faster agricultural development in the United States, China’s corn production per mu – a Chinese unit of measurement – has fallen further behind the US in the past decade, currently at 314kg (692 pounds) less per mu from 200kg in 2005.
“About 70 per cent of China’s corn seed comes from the US,” said Jia, who is also chairman of the African Academy of Sciences China branch. “Western countries, especially the US, have created a serious choke point on our seed resources.”
Escalating tensions between China and the US-led West have sounded the alarm over amid weak competition involving indigenous seeds – a major reason that China relies so heavily on food imports. Experts have called on Beijing to diversify its seed imports, increase collaboration between universities and companies, and employ smarter breeding techniques.
The world’s second-biggest economy needed to strengthen its agricultural technology and diversify its seed suppliers to address the international “choke point” in its agricultural sector, including the livestock industry and the breeding of high-quality fruits and vegetables, according to Chinese academics. “Our agricultural technology gap, particularly with the US, can’t be allowed to widen any further,” Deng Yan, a professor at Guangdong Ocean University’s School of Management, said at a seed conference in Hainan in early April. “Otherwise, it would put China at greater risk of containment by the US.”
Deng said that the tensions between the world’s two largest economies were putting immense strain on the domestic seed industry, leading to a decline in the availability of high-quality fruit and vegetable seeds, and the livestock breeding sector was also severely affected. Deng said that seed concerns had shifted from food quantity to quality amid restrictions on the import of high-end variety seeds.
“China’s high-end seed development capability is poor, and it’s a technological problem,” he said. China has nearly eight times more authorised domestic breeds of crop seeds than the US and the Netherlands combined, with 7,323 breeds authorised domestically between 2010 and 2019, according to data compiled by Deng from the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants.
“But in terms of international market share, China’s seed-competitiveness ranking quickly slips from first to 15th,” he said. He said China’s seed exports only had a 1.51 per cent share of the global market, compared with the Netherlands’ 20.47 per cent and the US’ 13.91 per cent. “The US has more than 2,000 seed patents from just one company, Cordova, while the total number of all patents in China combined is only 1,225, not to mention that over half of them come from a single state-owned enterprise, without which the figures would only get worse,” Deng said. To address this problem, China needs to foster a mutually beneficial relationship between businesses and research institutes, Deng contends. But the lack of collaboration between companies and research institutes has disrupted the commercial seed industry.
“In China, agricultural technology is certainly the forte of research institutes, and companies are less capable of solving seed-security issues,” Deng said. China is the second-largest seed consumer in the world, behind the US, with the market potential estimated at more than 120 billion yuan (US$16.6 billion). It had a seed-trade deficit of US$350 million in 2021, according to a report released in October by Vcbeat, an agricultural technology platform in Beijing.
Non paywall source:
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