Chinese leaders have been celebrating drones this year as a transformative agricultural technology, but a growing number of disputes over drones show that farmers who use them face substantial risks of civil or criminal liability. Drones spraying crops are becoming more and more common in China's countryside. Source: The Paper . China has nearly 3.3 million drones, of which 320,000 are agricultural drones that have created a so-called "low altitude economy," spraying pesticides and spreading fertilizer from the air. This year's "No. 1 Document" on rural policy promoted drones and robots as a way of cutting costs and doing more field work as the rural labor force shrinks. Technicians are working on ways to make drones recognize ripe fruit and pick it. However, these gadgets are creating new conflicts, literally colliding with China's changing economic structure, and posing a new threat to the Chinese regime's obsession with secrecy and control of in...
U.S. and Chinese readouts on the May 14-15 Trump-Xi summit in Beijing agree that agricultural trade between the two countries is important and should be revived, but their descriptions differ on what was agreed at the meeting. On May 17, The White House released a fact sheet that featured a commitment by China to purchase $17 billion worth of U.S. agricultural products annually through 2028 in addition to the soybean purchase commitment made in October 2025. The fact sheet also said China agreed to renew expired listings of U.S. beef exporters and pledged to resume imports of U.S. poultry products from U.S. States free of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI). Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said soybeans "are all taken care of" by the October purchase agreement, although China has never acknowledged it, China's first round of 12 million tons of soybean purchases was not completed by December 2025 as originally promised, and Successful Farming said "markets ...