Central China's Hubei Province now sells live fish to the Tibet
Autonomous Region, its 34th domestic market across the country.
Hubei also sells its fish to the Hong Kong and Macao special
administrative regions and Taiwan Province.
Blessed with a vast area of rivers and lakes and dubbed "a country
of rice and fish," Hubei has long led China's freshwater fish
production. Its output was 2.7 million tons last year.
The aquatics industry has continued to grow rapidly in the province
in recent years, according to Gao Zexiong, a local official in
charge of the sector.
Hubei has 500,250 hectares for breeding aquatic animals, some 11.1
percent of China's total, and up 10 percentage points from the
level in 1978 when the country launched its reform and opening-up
drive.
Now the province sells 40 percent of its aquatic products overseas,
earning 20 million US dollars annually.
Meanwhile, Hubei is the largest fry supplier in China with an
annual output of 40 billion fry, 25 percent of which are sold
outside the province.
Since Hubei's agricultural economy was restructured, the aquatics
industry has become the fastest growing sector, according to the
provincial statistics bureau.
It
provides the highest cash income for farmers. Last year, of the 92
yuan (US$11.08) annual increase in per-capita income for farmers in
Hubei, 23 yuan (US$2.77) came from aquatic products.
(People's Daily February 4, 2003)
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