Tag: China’s Hainan

  • County in S China’s Hainan shakes off poverty by developing ecological industry

    County in S China’s Hainan shakes off poverty by developing ecological industry

    Poverty alleviation remains a formidable task in Baisha Li autonomous county, which used to an extremely impoverished county in South China’s Hainan Province.

    “It’s all the more important for us to preserve lucid waters and lush mountains, our greatest assets, in order to bring about high-quality development,” said Liu Wei, Party chief of the county.

    Located in the heart of the island province, Baisha covers an area of about 2,117 square kilometers, about 57.9 percent of which has been delimited as “red lines” for ecological conservation. The county aims to build itself into an ecotourism area and a base for eco-agriculture and help people shake off poverty by developing the ecological industry.

    In 2015, Baisha began the migration process for its first relocation village for poverty alleviation by ecological protection. In January 2017, the residents of the last two villages in remote mountains moved to a relocation village equipped with better facilities, including townhouses and a standard basketball court. Their original homes became part of the Yinggeling national natural reserve. The county built houses for these resettled people for free and some of them have become forest rangers. According to statistics, the county’s forest coverage rate exceeded 81 percent this year.

    Since 2014, Party and government organs at various levels, enterprises and public institutions in Hainan have teamed up with the province’s poor areas to reduce poverty. The Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Science (CATAS) in Danzhou city has paired up with Baisha.

    Wang Kai, an assistant research fellow at CATAS, has become the fourth first secretary in charge of poverty alleviation in Yongchu village of the county’s Qingsong township, replacing his predecessor Huang Haijie, a plant breeding expert from the same academy.

    CATAS experts developed better tilling methods for new types of Shanlan rice, an old strain of rice that was planted by locals in Qingsong, doubling the output of the healthy and nutritious grain. In addition, its price is also rising.

    By building an ecotourism platform, Baisha has made Shanlan rice a sought-after eco-friendly agricultural product. In just a few years, about 333.3 hectares of Shanlan rice have been planted, including about 266.6 hectares in Qingsong.

    In early 2020, all 44 impoverished villages in Baisha were lifted out of poverty. Last year, the annual per capita income of rural residents in the county reached 12,912 yuan.

    Baisha has also strived to strengthen brand-building for the agriculture sector through optimizing agricultural structure. The county’s agricultural departments have hired specialized teams, supported professional cooperatives, improved the industrial chain, cultivated characteristic brands, and implemented an integrated business model of production, supply and marketing.

    Thanks to these efforts, Baisha has fostered 17 brands for agricultural products certified by China, and built the first county-level e-commerce industrial park in Hainan.

    In November 2018, the county released a public brand for local agricultural products, including green tea, honey, and blood orange. These products have become highly sought-after on e-commerce platforms, helping locals increase their incomes and live prosperous lives.

  • S China’s Hainan dispatches sci-tech experts to countryside to lift agricultural production

    S China’s Hainan dispatches sci-tech experts to countryside to lift agricultural production

    By Wang Shuo, People’s Daily

    Wang Fuyuan, a farmer from Maohui village, Wuzhishan of south China’s Hainan province,
    recently had a big harvest of his chilis. The red plants, grown in a vast demonstration field,
    present a picturesque image together with surrounding lush mountains, signaling the joy of a
    bumper year.
    “It’s the third batch we have picked, and we were busier days ago,” Wang said. “With a unit price
    of over 2 yuan ($0.28) per kilogram, I can earn over 1,000 yuan after a day’s picking,” the farmer
    introduced.
    However, this was barely imaginable a year before.
    “We planted tens of mu (1mu equals to about 667 square kilometers) of chilis last year, but the
    production was low because of the insect pests,” noted Wang Zhihai, Party chief of Maohui
    village. “We failed due to the lack of planting techniques,” he added.
    “But now things get better, because we are assured by Zhao Mingyuan,” the Party chief of the
    village told People’s Daily, referring to the sci-tech expert sent to the village by Hainan Academy
    of Agricultural Sciences.
    Zhao not only brought planting techniques, but also established a demonstration program of chili
    planting which provides the growers with seeds and fertilizers. Now, villagers in Maohui are
    rushing to plant chilis.
    Zhao is one of the many sci-tech experts who help farmers solve agricultural problems with their
    expertise. Taking techniques, information, management and capital to the countryside, they
    assist farmers to increase income and restructure industries under the guidance of relevant
    policies.
    Maodao is a village known for its passionfruit planting. Dubbed as “golden passionfruit”, the
    tasty fruits grown in the village are normally sold at 30 yuan per kilogram. Flocks of people have
    visited the village in recent years to learn experiences.
    Lv Jiawen, a sci-tech expert dispatched to Maodao village unveiled the secrets to the village’s
    success. According to him, the passion fruits used to be grown on flat trellises, which only
    enabled the fruits to receive sunlight on only one side; but now a “curtain type” method is
    adopted, by which the plants can fruit as the vines climb up. This method expanded the sunshine
    coverage, thus helping the plants yield more fruits. “The production increased threefold to
    fivefold,” Lv noted.
    The technical revolution came from institutional innovation. Forceful measures have been rolled
    out in Wuzhishan to fully implement the sci-tech expert mechanism. The experts selected or sent
    can enjoy an annual subsidy of 20,000 yuan, and the programs approved can receive a funding of
    no more than 200,000 yuan. “This boosted our confidence in continuing technical research,” Lv
    told People’s Daily.
    Statistics showed that a total of 78 sci-tech experts have been dispatched in Wuzhishan,
    including university professors and rural entrepreneurs, whose footsteps have covered all
    administrative villages in the city. Sixty relevant programs have been approved in 3 batches,
    which are expected to train 4,380 farmers and benefit 411 rural households, including 180
    impoverished ones. The output of these programs will reach 9 million yuan.
    The sci-tech experts are also encouraged to establish rural scientific cooperatives, technical

    societies and cooperatives through technical or capital investment, so as to build economic
    complexes with the farmers and make the sci-tech expert mechanism more lasting.