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Pig feed for small-scale farmers in China
The southwest province of China is a world of contradictions. Amidst
brand new cars and tall glass buildings, horse carts slowly wind their
way through the bustle and the traffic, carting vegetables for sale. Commuters
on bicycles peddle ferociously against the onward torrent of buses and
motorcycles, and stop on the way to buy pancakes from a wooden stall propped
up by the side of the road. The rich and poor live side by side in small
cities and towns, in the growing network of China's metropolis. But with
the growth of the economy and endless construction sites has come the
growing gap between the rich and the poor.
While business is booming in China's cities, the poverty gap is growing
between the urban and rural areas, with roughly 100 million rural people
living on less than US$1 a day. Income for rural people has increased,
but at a much lower rate than the urban industrial incomes which have
underpinned a national GDP growth of about nine per cent every year since
1978. The real challenge is east-west and rural-urban inequality. The
view from green paddy fields on the city outskirts is astonishing, as
the speed of development merges the surrounding landscape into new high
rises and roads every day. Between 40-50 million farmers are estimated
to have partially or fully lost their land to development in the past
decade, and that number is set to double in the next ten years.
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| credit:Stevie Mann/ILRI |
Demand and supply
China's rural people rely heavily on agriculture and their livestock
to provide food security amidst uncertain and rapid change; it is estimated
that almost 70 per cent of the Chinese are dependent on agriculture. But
China also has a very strong agricultural heritage. The Chinese were the
first to use an iron plough, and were thousands of years ahead of the
West in methods of winnowing grain. Today, they are leading producers
of pigs, poultry, rice, potatoes and sweet potatoes. And while demand
for livestock products is increasing, livestock research can help mitigate
the impacts that increasing demand will have on small-scale producers.
With rapid change, knowledge about how to adapt farming systems is essential.
There are many challenges ahead: how to feed increased numbers of livestock,
the risk to public health, and the impact on natural resources. To address
some of these issues, the Sichuan Animal Science Academy (SASA), has worked
with the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) and the Sichuan
Animal Husbandry Bureau to help farmers make the most of sweet potato
as a feed for pigs. In 2001, pig production accounted for four fifths
of total meat production in China. The province of Sichuan produces more
pigs than any other region, and most of this is small-scale production,
largely in poorer, hilly terrain. The pigs are fed on sweet potato but
as a feed source the crop presents two problems: it becomes rotten within
three weeks after harvest, and it can be harvested only once a year.
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| credit:Stevie Mann/ILRI |
To address these constraints, the International Potato Center (CIP) worked
to improve sweet potato varieties with Chinese institutions, and ILRI
joined them to assist with feed supplementation and silage-making technology
for sweet potato roots and vines. As a result, the extra biomass that
farmers have been able to conserve has radically changed the pig production
system. After harvesting, the vines are wilted to reduce moisture content.
The roots and vines are then chopped, mixed with supplements and stored
in airtight plastic bags, providing a nutritious feed that can support
pig herds for up to nine months of the year. Improved feed has also allowed
farmers to keep high-yielding cross-bred pigs, replacing much smaller
and slower growing scavenging pigs that spread zoonotic, diseases such
as cystercercosis. Other improvements have also been observed, including
better husbandry practices, animal housing, and use of feed supplements
and drugs, and these have increased the weight of pigs and greatly raised
farm income.
Racing ahead
Over the past few decades, China has made its transition from a rural
to an urban and market-based economy. The transition has occurred at remarkable
speed, especially considering its population of over 1.3 billion people.
The country has experienced one of the fastest rates of agricultural and
overall economic growth, amid reforms leading to rapid progress in several
areas, although agriculture - which was once a clear leader in reforms
- now lags behind other sectors. China's economy grew by an average of
9.9 percent between 1993 and 2004, accelerating the demand for electricity
and power networks, as well as food production.
In the outline of the national programme for science and technology development
between 2006 and 2020, published by the State Council, China will give
priority to technological development to solve problems, including those
in the environmental and agricultural sectors. As labour costs rise, and
many move to the cities in search of work, the agricultural sector will
face challenges. Small-scale farmers are already adopting mechanical innovations
in feed processing to overcome constraints and to continue to thrive.
Commenting on the work being done in Sichuan, the Director of ILRI-IFPRI
Joint Programme on Livestock Market Opportunities, Chris Delgado asks:
'What is the future of small-holders farming in this province? With the
hard work of the people and their science institutions, and a little technology
transfer from outside, it looks bright."
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