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Amid a major wave of international grain price hikes, China has managed to
maintain stable domestic prices.
Wheat prices on the Chicago Board
of Trade surged more than 140 percent in March, and rice prices went up over 80
percent.
The average grain retail prices
on Chinese domestic market, by contrast, register a slight growth only, from
4.14 yuan (59 US cents) per kilogram from the beginning of January to 4.19 yuan
by March end, according to statistics from the Ministry of Commerce.
The Chinese government's
unswerving effort to ensure food supply in the country, including its
restrictions on grain-consuming bio-ethanol projects, was behind the stable
prices, analysts said.
The central government vowed this
year to spend more than 562 billion yuan ($80.1 billion) to support farms and
the rural sector, 130.7 billion yuan more than last year.
The government decided in March
to spend another 25.25 billion yuan in addition to this year's rural budget,
mainly to subsidize farmers' purchase of seed, diesel, fertilizers and other
production materials.
The Ministry of Railways last
month ordered railway authorities in the northeast provinces to improve
efficiency and send 10 million tonnes of grains out of the grain-rich northeast
to the south from May 1 to June 30, in a bid to ease supply imbalances and stem
price rises.
China ranked second worldwide in
energy output and consumption. Almost half of its crude oil demand depends on
imports. But China attached greater priority to grain security when it actively
developed alternative energies.
The National Development and
Reform Commission (NDRC) stopped approving bio-ethanol projects using corn and
wheat in May, 2007, and planned to adapt the existing four grain-consuming
projects to use non-grain materials such as cassava and straw.
"Corn is an important feed
material in China, and developing corn-consuming bio-ethanol would affect the
supply of meat and eggs," said energy expert Han Xiaoping.
China would rather use non-grain
plants that usually grew in wild and salt land to produce bio-ethanol, so as not
to take away farm land and reduce grain production, said the NDRC.
Currently, the country is
producing 750,000 tonnes of bio-ethanol annually, and it scheduled to boost the
output to 5 million tonnes by 2010.
Apart from restricting
grain-consuming bio-ethanol projects, China is actively promoting other
alternative and clean energies, such as nuclear, wind and solar energies.
A total of 26 million households
in rural areas were using methane to provide for cooking and heating by the end
of 2007, and another 5 million households will join the group this year.
In the foreseeable future, the international energy crisis is likely to
pressure China to scale up its development of alternative energies, but as the
Agricultural Minister said recently, to a country with 1.3 billion mouths to
feed, any problem in food and agriculture would be perilous. |