MANILA, PHILIPPINES – The Asian Development Bank (ADB) is extending a $200 million loan to improve crop output and farming productivity in some of the People’s Republic of China’s (PRC) most important grain producing regions.
“The PRC accounts for about 8% of the world’s arable land but has to feed about 20% of the world’s people,” said Yaozhou Zhou, Senior Water Resources Specialist of ADB’s East Asia Department. “With the PRC’s population expected to reach more than 1.4 billion by 2030, the country’s future food security hinges on using scarce water resources more efficiently and making farming more productive.”
Funds for the Comprehensive Agricultural Development Project will improve irrigation and drainage in about 117,000 hectares of land in Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region and Anhui, Heilongjiang, Henan, Jilin and Yunnan provinces. The provinces collectively produced more than 28% of PRC’s total grain output in 2008.
Irrigation systems in PRC cover less than half of total arable land, and many are dilapidated because of poor maintenance, while poor drainage has left more than 24 million hectares of cultivated land waterlogged. Soil fertility has fallen because of overly intensive farming and excess salinity in some areas, while poor seed quality, a lack of modern farm machinery, and insufficient investment in farm-to-market roads all weigh on productivity.
Along with irrigation and drainage upgrades, the project will finance measures like land leveling, soil testing, fertilizer application and windbreak trees to reduce soil degradation and increase fertility. Assistance will be given to repair farm service roads, promote the use and distribution of high quality seeds, and to purchase modern farm machinery. Training in modern, environmentally friendly agricultural techniques will be given to farmer groups, with capacity building support provided to provincial and county offices implementing the project.
The target is a more than 30% increase in grain output in Anhui, Heilongjiang, Henan and Jilin provinces from 2009 levels by 2020, and an 11% increase in average per capita income for farmers from 2010 levels by 2020. The improvements are expected to benefit more than 1.2 million rural people in about 500 villages.