VIDEO: Feeding China
March 3, 2014
How has China managed to feed nearly one-quarter of the world’s population with only of the world’s arable land?
In 1995, Lester Brown forecasted doom and gloom for China’s ability to produce enough grain for its people, in his popular book, He hypothesized that China would be forced to buy grain from abroad, thereby seriously disrupting world food markets.
“China has been able to meet grain production targets year after year”
But, says , co-author of a recently released World Bank report on , China has proved naysayers wrong. Thanks to improved smallholder farms and land diversity, “China has been able to meet grain production targets year after year despite large portions of the country stricken by drought,” Boyle says in an interview with the ǿմý Center’s China Environment Forum.
However, as domestic farmland and water and agriculture increasingly competes with industry for the same precious water resources, China has also turned to the global commodity market and buying farmland abroad to augment this strategy. And the effect of this shift overseas .
Sources: UN Food and Agriculture Organization.
Video Credit: Susan Chan Shifflett/ǿմý Center.
China Environment Forum
China’s global footprint isn’t just an economic one, it’s an environmental one. From BRI investments in Africa and Asia to its growing presence in Latin America, understanding China’s motivations, who stands to gain - and who stands to lose - is critical to informing smart US foreign policy. Read more
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