China
needs to import more food to ease water, energy shortages: official
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[July 28, 2014]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China should
boost imports of food so it can dedicate more of its scarce water
supplies to energy production, especially in arid but coal-rich
regions like Xinjiang and Ningxia, a senior environmental official
said on Monday. |
Mu Guangfeng, the head of the environment impact assessment office
at the Ministry of Environmental Protection, told a conference China
should open up further to overseas food supplies and put stricter
limits on the consumption of water for agriculture in areas like
Xinjiang.
He said China, the world's top manufacturing nation, sends thousands
of ships to overseas ports and many of them return empty. Filling
them with grain would be an ideal solution.
"We cannot skip over energy, and if we open up our minds a little,
can we not further restrict agricultural water use in places like
northern Shaanxi and then break a taboo by using the space on our
ships to buy grain from overseas?" he said.
Mu's comments reflect a wider debate among policymakers about the
best use of China's increasingly scarce water resources as
industrial and agricultural demand soars.
Severe drought and scorching heat has damaged more than a million
hectares of farmland in China's Henan and Inner Mongolia provinces,
with no immediate relief in sight, state news agency Xinhua
reported.
China's per capita water supplies are only a quarter of the global
average, and in the northwest, shortages threaten to hold back
ambitious plans to develop the coal reserves, either by producing
synthetic natural gas or delivering power to eastern coastal markets
through long-distance cross-country grids.
China is already the world's top importer of soybeans, and has
slowly introduced foreign corn into the domestic market.
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But it remains reluctant to allow large-scale imports of staples
such as wheat or rice, and has vowed to keep its total food
self-sufficiency rate at around 95 percent, despite proposals from
researchers that the figure could be relaxed.
"I believe that increasing imported food will help protect China's
freshwater, and give ecologically fragile coal-producing regions the
ability to recover more quickly," said Mu.
"Some people say we can't import food, but what about energy? More
than 60 percent of our oil is imported, and nearly 50 percent of our
natural gas," he added.
(Reporting by David Stanway; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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