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China’s arable land barely above critical minimum
BEIJING—China’s arable land
stood at 1.83 billion mu (27.45 billion hectares) as of October 31,
2006, a mere26.6 million mu above the 1.8 billion mu critical mark set
by the government, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said on
Friday.
The figure was originally reported by the Ministry of Land Resources in
2006 and subsequently confirmed by the NBS. More than one-third of the
arable land was in the west, while eastern and central China each had
about 22 percent of the total. The northwest had only 17.6 percent,
according to the NBS agricultural census.
More than half of the total area was dry land, the census said. Rice
paddy and irrigable land comprised about 26 percent and 18.9 percent of
the total, respectively. Unremitting urbanization and property
development have devoured massive amounts of farmland in China,
threatening grain supply and agricultural development.
The government has implemented a slew of measures to guard the remaining
land against commercial use. The State Council issued a circular last
month saying any construction project that needs to occupy farmland or
vacant rural land shall have to apply for official approval. Without
land use approval, no other authorities shall give go-ahead to the
project, it said.
“No water, power and gas shall be provided for these projects, and no
financial institutions shall be permitted to offer them loans,” it said.
Urban dwellers are banned from buying residential land or houses from
farmers, nor may they buy apartments developed in rural areas by local
authorities in violation of the state regulations, it stressed. The
State Council also quintupled the tax on the use of arable land for
non-farming purposes and charged foreign-invested companies as much as
their domestic peers in a bid to protect farmland and control land
supply.
—Xinhua |