Environment News Service (ENS)
ENS logo

INSIGHTS: China's Shrinking Grain Harvest

WASHINGTON, DC, March 24, 2004 (ENS) - {Editor's note: Founder and president of Earth Policy Institute, Lester Brown is the author of the book "Eco-Economy: Building an Economy for the Earth," where his vision for an environmentally sustainable economy is detailed. Food, population, water, climate change, and renewable energy are his principle concerns.}

By Lester R. Brown

On February 8th, the Chinese government announced an emergency appropriation, increasing its agricultural budget by 25 percent, or roughly $3 billion. The additional funds primarily will be used to raise support prices for wheat and rice, the principal food staples, and to improve irrigation infrastructure. For the State Council to approve such an increase outside of the normal budget-making process indicates the government's mounting concern about food security.

After a remarkable expansion of grain output from 90 million tons in 1950 to 392 million tons in 1998, China's grain harvest has fallen in four of the last five years, dropping to 322 million tons in 2003. For perspective, this drop of 70 million tons exceeds the entire grain harvest of Canada.

Production of each of the three grains that dominate China's agriculture - wheat, rice, and corn - has dropped. But the output of wheat, grown mostly in the water-short north, has fallen the most. With wheat stocks falling and domestic prices climbing, Chinese wheat buying delegations recently have visited several grain-exporting countries. Initial purchases of some five million tons in Australia, Canada, and the United States have already sent world wheat prices climbing.

grains

Grains and flours are the staple foods in every Chinese household. (Photo courtesy APEC)
The recent price rises may be only the early tremors before the quake, however. China's harvest shortfalls of recent years have been covered by drawing down its once massive stocks of grain. But these will soon be depleted, forcing the government to cover the shortfall with imports.

China's wheat harvest fell short of consumption last year by 19 million tons. When the country's wheat stocks are depleted within the next year or so, the entire shortfall will have to be covered from imports. In some ways, the rice deficit is even more serious. Trying to cover a rice shortfall of 20 million tons in a world where annual rice exports total only 26 million tons could create chaos in the world rice economy. And with a corn shortfall of 15 million tons and stocks already largely depleted, China may soon have to import corn as well.

The handwriting on the wall is clear. While grain production is dropping, demand is climbing, driven up by the addition of 11 million people per year and by fast-rising incomes. As people in China earn more, they are moving up the food chain, eating more grain-fed livestock products such as pork, poultry, eggs, and, to a lesser degree, beef and milk.

The fall in China's grain harvest is due largely to a shrinkage of the grain harvested area from 90 million hectares in 1998 to 76 million hectares in 2003. Several trends are converging to reduce the grain area, including the loss of irrigation water, desert expansion, the conversion of cropland to nonfarm uses, the shift to higher-value crops, and a decline in double-cropping due to the loss of farm labor in the more prosperous coastal provinces.

Water tables are falling throughout the northern half of China. As aquifers are depleted and irrigation wells go dry, farmers either revert to low-yield dryland farming or, in the more arid regions, abandon farming altogether. In the competition for scarce water, China's cities and industry invariably get first claim, leaving farmers with a shrinking share of a shrinking supply. Losing irrigation water may mean either abandoning land or less double cropping.

China's farmers are also losing land to expanding deserts, such as the Gobi, which is consuming an additional 4,000 square miles each year. Paying farmers in the north and west to plant their grainland to trees to halt these advancing deserts is further reducing the grain area.

desert

The Gobi desert is spreading. (Photo courtesy European Space Agency)
Urban expansion, industrial construction, and highway construction are all shrinking the land available for crops. The enthusiasm for establishing development zones for commercial and residential building or industrial parks in the hope of attracting investment and jobs is taking big chunks of cropland. The Ministry of Land and Resources reports that some 6,000 development zones and industrial parks cover some 3.5 million hectares.

Cars, too, are taking a toll. Every 20 cars added to China's automobile fleet require the paving of an estimated 0.4 hectares of land - one acre, or roughly the area of a football field - for parking lots, streets, and highways. Thus the two million new cars sold in 2003 meant paving over an area equal to 100,000 football fields.

In a country where farms average 1.6 acres (0.6 hectares), many grain farmers are shifting to higher-value fruits and vegetables to boost income. In each of the last 11 years, the area in fruits and vegetables has increased, expanding by an average of 1.3 million hectares a year.

In the more prosperous coastal provinces, the migration of farm labor to cities has made it more difficult to double-crop land. For example, the once widespread practice of planting winter wheat and summer corn depends on quickly harvesting the wheat when it ripens in June and immediately preparing the seedbed to plant the corn. Many villages no longer have enough able-bodied workers to make this quick transition--and the double-cropped area is shrinking as a result.

Reversing the fall in grain production will not be easy even with China's newly adopted economic incentives. Each trend that is shrinking the grainland area has a great deal of momentum. Reversing any one of them would take an enormous effort. Reversing all of them is inconceivable. If the new economic incentives should coincide with unusually favorable weather this year, a modest upturn in grain production might result, but it will likely be only temporary.

China is the first major grain producing country where environmental and economic trends have combined to reverse the historical growth in grain production. This decline in the grain harvest in a country that is home to more than one-fifth of the world's people will affect all of us.

market

Fresh corn for sale at a market near the Three Gorges Dam (Photo courtesy Galen Frysinger)
Barring an economic collapse, China soon will be forced to turn to the world market for massive imports of 30, 40, or 50 million tons per year. This comes at a time when world grain stocks are at their lowest level in 30 years and when U.S. farmers are losing irrigation water to aquifer depletion and to cities. Among other things, this means that the surplus world grain production capacity and cheap food of the last half-century may soon be history. Higher food prices could become a permanent part of the economic landscape. Adjusting to these higher food prices could become a dominant preoccupation of governments in the years ahead.

When China turns to the world market, it will necessarily turn to the United States, which controls nearly half of world grain exports. This presents an unprecedented geopolitical situation in which 1.3 billion Chinese consumers who have a $120 billion trade surplus with the United States - enough to buy the entire U.S. grain harvest twice over - will compete with Americans for U.S. food, likely driving up food prices for the United States and the world.

Moving grain from the United States to China on the scale that is needed will likely involve loading two or three ships every day. The long line of grain laden ships that may soon stretch across the Pacific will bring these two countries closer together economically, but managing the flow of grain to optimize the benefits for people in both countries will not be easy. It could become one of the major U.S. foreign policy challenges of this new century.

 

Entergy Releases 2008 Sustainability Report Plant a Tree for Arbor Day with Mohawk Friends of Animals Win: African Antelope Shielded From Safari Club and Trophy Tourists Green Program Launched to Keep City Parks Poo Free U-Haul Customers Give $1 Million to Charity Core Services Reduces Its Impact on the Environment and Its Use of Natural Resources Women Are the Energy Decision Makers and Want the U.S. to Move Toward Clean Energy, a New National Survey Shows Mohawk Fine Papers Supports Two New Alternative Energy Projects Atrion Leverages Content Expertise to Launch New Generation of RegDBOnline Database for Global Environment, Health, Safety and Transport Information SPIN-Gardening™ Discussion and Action Guide Now Available Medical Experts Prescribe Legislation to Help Prevent Cancer Think London's 'Route to 2012' Olympic Games Roadshow With UKTI Underway With Cleantech Panel Discussion in San Francisco Planet Green's Blue August Month Dives Into Summer With a Celebration of the Oceans Anheuser-Busch Launches Employee Program to Support World Environment Day Hollywood Studios Say No to Plastic Dry-Cleaning Bags and Yes to the Green Garmento Global Advanced Recycling Technology Ltd (GAR-Tech) and Managing Director, Derek W R Reffell, Answer Allegations by PowerMaster Corp. New Green Homes Course and Educational Set Now Available For College Educators Tigo Energy Reaches Key Milestones and Raises $10 Million 'B' Round Financing Atrion First to Deliver Support for EU's new Regulation on Classification, Labeling and Packaging With IA 4.1 GREEN BASH – Multimedia Arts Meet the Green Movement The Global Green Portal Launched NatureAir Receives Prestigious Recognition from World Travel & Tourism Council Master Planning Sustainable Green Communities Energy, Environment and Technology News (EETN) Announces New Blog Monitor Service IC Bus Helps Emeryville, California Go Green With New Hybrid Commercial Buses Natural Selection, Inc. and Empowered Energy Solutions, Inc. Partner for Optimized Renewable Energy Products Architect John Blackburn Launches Eco-Friendly Barn Designs for Equestrian and Agricultural Use Global Advanced Recycling Technology ("Gar-Tech") and Managing Director Derek Reffell Default on Lawsuit Brought by Powermaster Corp. Green Energy Technologies Launches WindCube(R) at Windpower 2009 Thieves Launch New Portable Tetra Pak Wines for Summer NonProfitShoppingMall.com Celebrates Mother's Day and Mother Earth, Naming EarthShare Its Featured Charity Partner for May SustainableBusiness.com/
GreenDreamJobs.com Enters Strategic Partnership with Footprint Media
Virginia Plant Takes Top Environmental Honors in National Cement Awards Fresh Perspective Launches Research Tool for Business Leaders Overwhelmed by Information Pending Bill on Renewable Energy Omits Huge Source Matter Network Has Most Engaged Green Audience, According to comScore Occidental Petroleum's Toxic Legacy in the Peruvian Amazon To Dominate Annual Meeting, Says Amazon Watch New Experience-based Book & DVD Set Offers Unique Opportunity for Understanding Green Homes Siemens Building Technologies: Committed to a Greener, Sustainable Future Save The Planet -- Win a Prize Capital-Intensive Cleantech Innovations May Lose out in Battle to Secure Funding EMS Teams With MATRA for the Rebirth of a Legend: The Limited Edition TidalForce(TM) M-750 x2.0 Electric Bike World's First Green Hotels Directory Launched PR Newswire and World-Wire Join Forces to Showcase Environmentally-Focused News and Events
WW TRANSMIT
 

License ENS News
for websites and newsletters

Send a news story to ENS editors

Upload environmental news videos

Share ENS stories with the world