Lack of investment is a roadblock to China's vision of a space-age agriculture with automated tractors and barns, internet-linked sensors, sprinklers, and heaters, and "green" recycling and circular systems. A new Chinese agricultural lending program aims to overhaul agricultural equipment and facilities to make a great leap toward high-tech and "green" priorities set by the 15th five-year plan, yet it has received hardly any publicity. China has several programs to promote investment: an agricultural machinery purchase subsidy, a subsidy for scrapping old machinery, and a program to construct high-standard fields with irrigation, roads and electric infrastructure. Still, China's agriculture produces 6.7% of GDP but only attracted 2% of the country's fixed asset investment in recent years. On March 9, China's Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs issued a " Notice on Implementation of Policies on Loans for Equipment Upgrading in the Agricu...
Soybean shipments from Brazil are suddenly in limbo because Chinese customs inspectors forced their Brazilian counterparts to adopt a new phytosanitary control system. The disruption comes during Brazil's peak month for soybean shipments bound for China. Is the timing coincidental, or is it another attempt to use phytosanitary concerns to "manage" the flow of imports? Earlier this week, a Latin American Cargill executive told a Reuters correspondent that Brazilian inspectors had adopted a new inspection system this month. Cargill had stopped buying Brazilian soybeans for shipment to China until they could figure out how to work with the new system. News media have reported that Brazil's agriculture ministry had tightened inspections at the behest of Chinese customs regulators based on reports that inspectors they found problems such as presence of insects, beans coated with pesticides or fungicides, weed seeds, and heat damage in Brazilian beans arriving at the Chin...