Young people return to hometown to vitalize farmlands in central China’s Hunan
By He Yong, People’s Daily
“Despite
of the impacts of the novel coronavirus epidemic, we still managed to achieve
this year’s goal of planting high-quality rice on 1,533 hectares of farmland,”
said Yin Hongdao excitedly.
The
29-year-old grain farmer, who is from Yangban village, Xiumei town, Linli
county in central China’s Hunan province, was once a deputy general manager in
charge of human resources of an electronics company in Dongguan, south China’s Guangdong
province.
Although
Yin led a free life when working in Dongguan, he was far away from his family.
When he came back home for the Spring Festival in 2016, he found his father had
aged a lot, with all his hair going white. His father Yin Fuyuan has engaged in
grain processing for over three decades.
Yin
Hongdao, who decided to work in the village after the Spring Festival, found
the equipment too old and the barns too small. For this reason, many farmers
had to travel over 10 kilometers to sell their grain. Besides, large grain enterprises
prefer working with companies with standard barns.
Then
he came up with the idea of setting up a standard barn, which would cost 4.5
million yuan ($0.63 million). Although opposed by many, including his father,
he built the barn with his own savings. The new barn could store 17,000 tons of
grains, more than twice the capacity of the old one.
This
allowed his company to cooperate with China Grain Reserves Group
Ltd. Company in the same year, and his business to cover grain farmers in
four towns nearby.
But
here came another problem – the grain’s varieties and quality varied greatly, so
the products could not be sold at a good price. He decided to promote high-quality
rice, through contract farming.
Thanks
to the efforts of his company, high-quality rice was planted on 1,000 hectares
of farmland in 2017, increasing the net income of each household by 150 yuan
($21) per mu (0.07 hectare), up by over 20 percent. Highly motivated by such
good news, quite a few farmers planted rice again on their abandoned farmland.
In
2019, the high-quality rice of his company reached 1,200 hectares.
Yin’s
company has signed long-term contracts with more than 10 farmers, and three of
them have been lifted out of poverty.
Yin is one of the many young people who chose
to go back to their hometown to start a career in recent years. The past three years have seen over 1,700 young talents going back to
Linli county, which succeeded in lifting 4,200 local people out of poverty.
The
ways the young people make contributions to Linli county are diverse. Some
started their own business right after graduation; some started a career after
accumulating wealth in their previous jobs. Some entered the field of
e-commerce, opening up a vast market for local agricultural products; some
brought new technologies and equipment to the farms, making agricultural
activities more efficient; and some built barns to facilitate contract farming.
The
key of rural vitalization lies in the vitalization on all fronts including
rural industry and training of professionals.
Thanks
to a series of favorable policies of local governments, including building
relevant platforms and providing care and support, a growing number of young
people are returning to the villages. While realizing their own dreams, they
also inject fresh vitality to the villages.
A
farmer transplants early rice with a rice transplanter in Renhe village,
Xiaodukou town, Lixian county, Hunan province on April 22. Photo by Bai Yipu/
People’s Daily Online
Young people return to hometown to vitalize farmlands in central China’s Hunan
Reviewed by PEOPLES MAIL
on
10:43
Rating:
No comments: