China’s
rural pollution causing crop failure –
'Nothing
comes from these plants. They look alive, but they’re actually dead
inside.’
27
July, 2012
In
Dapu, a rain-drenched rural outpost in the heart of China's grain
basket, a farmer grows crops that she wouldn't dare to eat.
A
state-backed chemicals factory next to her farm dumps wastewater
directly into the local irrigation pond, she says, and turns it a
florescent blue reminiscent of antifreeze. After walking around in
the rice paddies, some farmers here have developed unexplained
blisters on their feet.
"Nothing
comes from these plants," says the farmer, pointing past the
irrigation pond to a handful of stunted rice shoots. She grows the
rice, which can't be sold because of its low quality, only in order
to qualify for payments made by the factory owners to compensate for
polluting the area. But the amount is only a fraction of what she
used to earn when the land was healthy, she says. The plants look
alive, "but they're actually dead inside."
The
experiences of these farmers in Dapu, in central China's Hunan
province, highlight an emerging and critical front in China's
intensifying battle with pollution. For years, public attention has
focused on the choking air and contaminated water that plague China's
ever-expanding cities. But a series of recent cases have highlighted
the spread of pollution outside of urban areas, now encompassing vast
swaths of countryside, including the agricultural heartland.
Estimates
from state-affiliated researchers say that anywhere between 8% and
20% of China's arable land, some 25 to 60 million acres, may now be
contaminated with heavy metals. A loss of even 5% could be
disastrous, taking China below the "red line" of 296
million acres of arable land that are currently needed, according to
the government, to feed the country's 1.35 billion people.
Rural
China's toxic turn is largely a consequence of two trends, say
environmental researchers: the expansion of polluting industries into
remote areas a safe distance from population centers, and heavy use
of chemical fertilizers to meet the country's mounting food needs.
Both changes have been driven by the rapid pace of urbanization in a
country that in 2012, for the first time in its long history, had
more people living in cities than outside of them.
Yet
the effort to keep urbanites comfortable and well-fed has also led to
the poisoning of parts of the food chain, and some of the pollution
is traveling back to the cities in a different—and for many, more
frightening—guise.
"Pollution
can be displaced only to an extent. You can't put walls around it,"
says Judith Shapiro, the U.S.-based author of the recent book China's
Environmental Challenges. She is one of a number of researchers and
environmental activists—including many in China—who warn that
pollution poses an existential threat to the current regime. It is,
she says, "perhaps the single most significant determinant of
whether the Communist Party will maintain its legitimacy in coming
years." [more]
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