Special Report:
China's war on snow
havoc
BEIJING, Feb. 8 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese government has urged localities to
be on the alert for possible animal epidemics as the snow disaster may have so
weakened livestock that they may be vulnerable to epidemics like avian influenza
and blue-ear pig disease.
"Livestock are vulnerable to epidemic diseases after severe weather like
torrential rains, blizzard and deep freeze," warned a State Council circular
from the disaster relief and emergency command center, ordering all breeding
farms in snow-hit central, southern and eastern China to sterilize livestock
pens.
Farmers should carefully examine their breeding facilities, clean up snow
and reinforce damaged pens to secure proper indoor temperatures for livestock.
Dead poultry and domesticated animals must be subject to harmless treatment and
be banned from the market, it said.
No epidemics have been reported yet. But the command center has ordered
relevant departments to keep a close eye on hidden dangers that might jeopardize
the safety of poultry and livestock products.
A total of 19 provinces and autonomous regions have been seriously hit by
snow, the worst in five decades, and even in a century in few areas, since Jan.
10. When the deep freeze took most Chinese off guard.
The stock-breeding industry also reported drastic losses. In Baoji City of
northwestern Shaanxi Province alone, nearly 20,000 cow, sheep and pigs have been
frozen to death after 200 livestock pens were weighed down and destroyed by ice
as much as 6 cm thick.
Another 9,548 mu (636 hectares) of land under vegetable production and
5,000 mu (333 hectares) of fruit trees were damaged.
In the southwestern province of Guizhou, the snow cost farmers4.348 billion
yuan (604 million U.S. dollars) in direct economic losses while livestock
breeders lost another 243 million yuan (33.8 million U.S. dollars).
No national figures on the losses of agriculture and livestock are
available. By Feb. 1, China has lost 53.8 billion yuan (7.5 billion U.S.
dollars) to the heavy snow, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs.
After debriefing the reports of eight work teams on the damages and
disaster relief in the agricultural sector on Thursday night, the command center
has urged the Ministry of Agriculture and local agricultural departments to take
post-disaster production as their "most pressing task".
Most of the worst-hit regions, Hunan, Hubei, Guizhou provinces and the
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, provide fresh vegetable during the annual
off-season between April and May. The unexpected disaster therefore has
aggravated the pressure on the year's vegetable supply, noted the command
center.
In some areas, power outage coupled with water constraints has made it
difficult for farmers to restore and repair plastic greenhouses, livestock pens
and fish ponds. Road closings also hindered the transport of farm produce and
triggered feed shortages for breeding farms.
Imminent difficulties facing the agricultural and stock-breeding industries
are capital and labor constraints, it said.
Quite a number of villages and households that rely on bank loans for
stock-breeding found themselves insolvent overnight or financial strained for
reinvestment. Moreover, youngsters who migrated into cities to work couldn't
rush back in time to cope with the disaster because of road and railway
breakdowns.
To deal with the situation, the government has mobilized agro-technicians
and grass-root cadres to deliver door-to-door services on post-disaster
reconstruction. Free seeds, fish fry and livestock have been available to
farmers.
The Guizhou provincial government, which received a relief fund of 19
million yuan (2.6 million U.S. dollars) from the Ministry of Finance, had
planned to use the money to buy diesel oil, fertilizers, seeds and pesticides
for farmers and subsidize stock-breeding production.
The Ministry of Agriculture was asked to closely track the price
fluctuations and well coordinate the supply and demand of farm produce.
Triggered by the blue ear pig disease, the prices of pork almost doubled
last year and sparked an upward trend in the country's consumer prices inflation
which rose 4.8 percent in 2007and hit an 11-year high of 6.9 percent in
November, well above the government target of 3 percent.