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Precision
Farming Comes to Shanghai
Precision Farming, the world's most advanced farming practice,
could help billions of farmers in China to retire their oxen,
put their ploughs away and rely on satellites.
The new technique which it is hoped will revolutionize agriculture
in China will first be introduced via a 15 million yuan ($1.8
million) experiment in a modern agricultural zone on the outskirts
of Shanghai near the East China Sea. The facility will cover
about 140 hectares and is expected to be completed within three
years.
China's farming experts hope the experiment can be a role
model for China's farming community in enhancing crop production,
reducing required outlay and discarding traditional farming
methods.
Precision farming had its debut in the US in the 1980s and
spread to a handful of developed countries like France and
Japan during the early 1990s. The technique involves using
high technology to maximize farming efficiency.
"It helps increase the crop yield, provide better management
decisions, cuts chemical and fertilizer costs and diminishes
pollution," said Yang Xingwei, an expert from the Shanghai
Municipal Meteorological Bureau in charge of the project.
Unlike traditional farming, this advanced new method requires
the division of a farming field into small units which are
individually managed by computers.
Each section of a field is equipped with sensors to collect
information on the soil, moisture and the growth of crops and
then transmit the data to a global positioning system and geographic
information system. After receiving the information from the
satellites, experts analyse the data and decide the specific
dose of fertilizer and pesticide for each unit.
"This will dramatically enhance the utility of fertilizers
and pesticides," said Yang.
Currently, fertilizers and pesticides used in farming in China
only secure an efficient utilization rate of between 20 to
30 per cent. With precision farming, the rate shoots up to
around 60 per cent, said Yang. |