China lost around 18 to 20
million tons of grain annually due to inadequate storage by
farmers, the State Grain Administration has claimed.
The losses were valued at between 18 and 24 billion
yuan (US$2.25 to 3 billion) each year.
The administration found in a survey that at least 60
percent of China's grain output was kept by some 240 million rural
households, as Chinese farmers held the belief that they had no
worries as long as they had enough grain in hand.
Farmers in China's major grain-producing areas usually
stored grain in knitted bags, gunny bags and clay vessels, which
failed to prevent rot or stop mice and insects eating the
contents.
Also, the irrational spraying of pesticides by farmers
while storing grain could lead to high chemical residues, posing
serious health risks.
The administration called on officials to help rural
households to improve storage to reduce losses, increase farmers'
income and ensure food safety.
The United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization
said the world lost around eight percent of total grain output each
year due to insects and rot.
China, the world's most
populous country, faces challenges in grain security due to its
decreasing farmland area and a population increasing by more than
10 million each year.
The country's grain output is expected to hit more
than 490 million tons in 2006.
(Xinhua News Agency October 19, 2006)
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