China, UN sign MOU on global food security amid uncertainties
China on
June 20 signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the UN World Food
Program (WFP) in Zhengzhou, Central China’s Henan Province, a major move to
recognize China’s contribution to global food security and show the country’s
willingness to share its agricultural experience with more developing countries
amid an unstable global situation.
China’s
food security guarantee capability has improved markedly over years of
development, Zhang Wufeng, director of the National Food and Strategic Reserves
Administration, said at the signing ceremony on Thursday, June 20, adding that
the country could now ensure basic self-sufficiency of grain, which has
effectively promoted the sound and stable development of China’s economy and
made positive contributions to world food security.
“China
is willing to share its knowhow in the sector, such as experience in grain
storage system management, with more developing countries in the world and thus
ensure global food security,” Zhang noted.
In
December 2018, China and the WFP signed an agreement help five African
countries - Somalia, South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the
Republic of Congo and Lesotho - to address their food security challenges.
China’s
assistance has enabled the WFP to purchase more than 8,700 tons of rice in
China and other food globally that will benefit approximately 300,000 people in
African countries, according to the WFP.
The
world needs China to join in the efforts to address issues such as poverty and
hunger, and it also needs lessons and China’s own experience in these areas,
Stanlake Samkange, director of policy and programs of the WFP, said during the
forum.
Over the
past six years, China has lifted 82.39 million rural poor out of poverty, with
the rural poor population falling from 98.99 million in 2012 to 16.6 million in
2018, according to a report from the Xinhua News Agency. The country has also
set a goal of completely eliminating absolute poverty by 2020.
Officials
and enterprises in China’s agricultural sector reemphasized the importance of
boosting development of the country’s grain sector during an industry seminar
held in Zhengzhou on June 20, arguing that domestic food security would be a
stabilizer for the national economy.
“To
expand agricultural cooperation with countries like Russia, diversify import
sources and expand planting areas of certain agricultural products such as
soybeans will be vital to maintain food safety and make sure China could have
an advantage in the trade war with the US,” an industry representative who preferred
to remain anonymous told the Global Times
on June 20.
Source:Global Times
On June 24, 2019, in the
comprehensive green test area for rice high-efficiency technology innovation in
Yazhou Modern Agriculture Park, Hai’an City, Jiangsu Province, the staff were
working on transplanting. (Photo by Zhai Huiyong from People’s Daily Online)
China, UN sign MOU on global food security amid uncertainties
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