Special report: Strong Earthquake Jolts SW
China
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This combined photo shows the same place of Penghua Village in Mianzhu on August 11, 2006(above) and after the quake on May 16, 2008(bottom). (Xinhua/Chen Xie) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, May 17 (Xinhua) -- The earthquake in
southwest China has seriously affected agricultural production in Sichuan and
other disaster-hit regions, said a senior official from the Ministry of
Agriculture on Saturday.
The quake, which triggered landslides in the
mountainous province, damaged 33,333 hectares of farmland, including more
than10,000 hectares of wheat and rape and more than 20,000 hectares of
vegetables, in the 13 worst-hit cities and counties, said Wei Chaoan, Vice
Agriculture Minister.
As the disaster also destroyed irritation systems in
some areas, up to 100,000 hectares of rice paddies might have to be used to grow
alternative crops, he said.
"A large amount of farming facilities, including more
than 20,000 farm machines, were damaged," Wei said. He admitted the repair work
would be "very difficult".
As the country's leading agricultural province,
Sichuan provided 6 percent of the nation's total grain output, including
5percent of the national total summer grains, 8 percent of the total oil crops
and 5 percent of the total vegetable production, said Wei.
He said the 12.5 million head of livestock killed in
the quake were mostly poultry. The poultry losses were a small fraction of the
1.5 billion birds that the province aimed to produce in 2008.
Wei said the quake had limited impact on farm
production nationwide, adding he had "full confidence" in the steady national
supply of grain and other major products and to keep the prices stable.
He said the ministry compensate for the agricultural
losses by stepping up production in other areas and closely monitor farm produce
supplies in the affected areas.
Zhang Yuxiang, an official in charge of the
ministry's market and economic division, said farm produce prices nationwide
remain almost the same as before the quake.
The supply of vegetables was adequate as farmers
nationwide had planted more after the severe winter weather in January, she
said.
The death toll from the earthquake, measuring 7.8 on
the Richter scale on Monday, rose to 28,881 nationwide as of 2 p.m. Saturday,
while 198,347 people were injured, according to the Information Office of the
State Council.