Friday May 25, 2018
    Home > News > Politics
    Text:| Print|

    China to boost agricultural modernization

    2013-01-16 08:25 Xinhua     Web Editor: Liu Xian comment

    China's stepped-up urbanization should benefit agricultural modernization, and the two will complement each other, Vice Premier Li Keqiang said Tuesday.

    Urbanization will promise the largest potential for domestic demand, while agricultural modernization is an essential foundation of, and crucial support for, all economic and social growth, Li said.

    He made the remarks while chairing a meeting at the Academy of State Administration of Grain (ASAG) after visiting the academy's grain storage laboratory and food safety laboratory.

    "China's reforms commenced from the countryside about 30 years ago. We will still rely on reforms and innovation to keep and manage 'the country's granaries' and promote the 'new four modernizations,'" Li said.

    The "new four modernizations" are industrialization, informatization, urbanization and agricultural modernization.

    China first put forward the term "four modernizations" in the early 1960s, targeting the fields of industry, agriculture, national defense and science and technology.

    Any solution to agricultural and grain problems should be based on the big picture, Li stressed.

    Urbanization should highlight efforts to urbanize people, namely integrating farmers into towns, instead of just willfully building towns, Li said.

    China's grain demand-supply relationship is in a tight balance and it has not been changed, as grain harvests are largely determined by climate, Li said.

    In the future, grain consumption will continue to rise. No one can shoulder the burden of feeding more than 1 billion people and "we can only rely on ourselves," Li said.

    Global grain prices have been running high and will continue to do so in the future, and China's agricultural foundation, especially its grain foundation, should not relax, Li said.

    The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences on Tuesday released the Annual Report on China's Urban-Rural Integration 2012. It says a great amount of rural labor forces are moving to cities, and an inadequate labor force is gradually becoming a key factor hampering the country's grain output.

    Official figures show that China's grain output in 2012 rose 3.2 percent year on year to 589.57 million tonnes. However, the country faces a tightening grain supply amid increasing demand driven by population growth.

    At a rural work conference in December, Minister of Agriculture Han Changfu said China has increased its imports of farm produce to meet domestic needs, and the country plans to encourage more industrial and commercial enterprises to invest in the agriculture sector.

    Comments (0)

    Copyright ©1999-2011 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
    Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

    主站蜘蛛池模板: 阜新市| 沽源县| 南平市| 灵川县| 于都县| 荔波县| 大名县| 漳州市| 金寨县| 茂名市| 永昌县| 伊宁县| 舟曲县| 杂多县| 遵义县| 天等县| 榆林市| 仁寿县| 江山市| 衡东县| 文成县| 贡山| 苍梧县| 南京市| 兴国县| 隆昌县| 桦川县| 噶尔县| 岱山县| 康定县| 贵南县| 江源县| 仪陇县| 肃北| 南陵县| 武宁县| 扶沟县| 昌邑市| 桃源县| 保靖县| 沙洋县|