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China's Loss of Cropland: 7.5 mil ha over 10 years

China's latest survey shows that cultivated land comprised 16 percent of national land use. Orchards and plantations account for another 3 percent. Forests and grasslands are the most prevalent land use, covering a combined 68 percent of land area. Urban/industrial/mining covers 4 percent of land, according to the survey results. The land survey results were released in a communique by China's Ministry of Natural Resources and National Bureau of Statistics after 3 years of work. This survey measured land area as of December 31, 2019. The previous land survey had gathered land data as of 2009.  Calculated from China 3rd National Land Survey. The sum of land area categories reported by the Chinese land survey totals near 7.8 million square km, substantially less than the 9.4 million square km China total land area reported by World Bank statistics. China's 2020 Statistical Yearbook reported data for 2017 slightly different from the 2009 land survey totals. Officials are cong...

China Blames Big Grain Traders for its Woes

With China's grain and soybean imports on a record pace and agricultural prices at a high level, communist propagandists are blaming multinational companies for price-gouging. When Chinese officials blame someone else for a problem, they are usually trying to divert attention from their own mistakes. Wonder what they're hiding? On August 11, the Party's Economic Daily asked, " International grain prices are persistently high; are domestic grain prices stable? " This article cited the covid-19 pandemic, flooding, drought, supply chain disruptions, and soaring shipping costs for driving world food prices to a high level. This article called for China to increase its control of food supply chains, diversify its sources of imports, create major Chinese international grain merchants, and increase China's voice and price-setting power in global markets (all mentioned briefly in the 2021 "Number 1 Document." A week later, Economic Daily's " Corn m...

China Hog Stock Riches Evaporate

China's hog market boom has turned to bust, feeding worries in corporate boardrooms and government offices. As profits and equity vanished, pig producers have pulled back on feed purchases and trimmed expenses.  China's African swine fever (ASF) epidemic produced a 2-year M-shaped price cycle. The first cases of ASF appeared in August 2018, but hog prices were depressed until mid-2019 as farmers killed off their herds to avoid the epidemic. Prices soared about 150 percent in three months--reaching their peak in November 2019. Hog prices fluctuated in mini-cycles until they crashed during the first half of 2021. China's hog prices are now back where they started in 2018.  Average wholesale price from China Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs. At these prices most hog producers are said to be losing money. Farms monitored by China's Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs posted a 9.7-percent loss in May 2021. Most corporate hog-farming companies reported substant...

China "Buying U.S. Farmland"...and Regretting It?

Some U.S. politicians warn of a Chinese takeover of American farmland, but the one big acquisition of U.S. farming assets may have been a bust for the Chinese buyer. At the same time U.S. politicians were moaning about land grabs, a Chinese meat scion got booted from his dad's company for arguing that the acquisition of Smithfield Foods was a boondoggle.  Last month Rep. Dan Newhouse of Washington State warned , “The current trend in the United States is leading us toward the creation of a Chinese-owned agricultural land monopoly.” National Public Radio got in early on the story by running  a May 27 segment  on the threat of foreign investors gobbling up U.S. farm fields and destroying rural communities, with a nod toward a Chinese company's ownership of Smithfield grain elevators as a prime example. Within days, politicians glommed on and numerous stories led with a warning that "China is buying up U.S. farmland," citing USDA statistics and the example of the Smithfi...

Wuhan Consumers Hoarding Food "Need a Sense of Security"

Chinese consumers have been clearing off supermarket shelves as they worry about new virus outbreaks and floods. Authorities insist supplies are ample and say there's no reason to hoard food, but citizens don't seem to believe them.  China is experiencing its biggest covid outbreak since the 2019-20 Wuhan outbreak. Though cases are few, these are the most geographically widespread and the delta variant is more transmissible than last year's version. China's health commission reported 85 new cases of covid-19 on August 4, bringing the cumulative total to 1,285. New domestic cases were spread across Jiangsu (40 cases), Hunan (9), Beijing (3), Shandong (3), Henan (3), Yunnan (3), and Hubei (1). Twenty-nine cases from abroad were discovered in Shanghai, Yunnan, Fujian, Guangdong, and Shandong.  The new covid outbreaks follow disastrous flooding in Henan Province July 17-24 that inundated fields, filled barns with mud, and drowned livestock. Storms from another typhoon foll...

Prices Crash With Chinese Swine Rebound

Chinese hog prices have now fallen to their level of two years ago. After about 14 months at stubbornly high levels, pork prices are down more than half from their year-ago level, and officials are scrambling to mop up excess supplies. Officials worry that losses will lead to more gyrations in supply. Average wholesale prices reported by China Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs. The swine inventory at the end of Q2 2021 was at its highest level in the last five years, according to data released by China's National Bureau of Statistics.  Calculated from China National Bureau of Statistics reports. The increase in the swine inventory during Q2 is remarkable given that the statistics bureau also reported a surge in hog slaughter during Q2--usually the off-season for hog slaughter in China. The surge of slaughter is consistent with monthly slaughter data reported by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs which indicated 22 million head were slaughtered at "above-scal...

Floods, pests, disease, drought pose risks for China's big harvest

Epic flooding, drought, hungry caterpillars, and stubborn African swine fever have Chinese officials scrambling to shore up the fall grain harvest--just two months away. Torrential rains and catastrophic floods in Henan Province this week are the latest and most-publicized of a series of mid-summer extreme weather events that have affected most of China's major agricultural regions in 2021.  On July 21, Xi Jinping issued "important directives" to prevent casualties and property damage from the serious flooding in Henan. Noting that rivers are above their normal levels, dams are vulnerable, some trains have been stopped and flights have been canceled, the flood control situation was pronounced to be very severe. Soldiers were ordered to help with rescue and aid, and authorities were instructed to provide ample warning of heavy rain, typhoons, mountain torrents, and mudslides.  Flooding in Jiangxi Province. In June, Yicai reported that there was widespread flooding in In...