8
million acres of China’s farmland are too polluted to grow food
30
December, 2013
You’d
think that China would be big enough that it could grow food for all
the people who live there and keep that food clear of the worst
contamination of its growing industrial production. But, nope, these
two things are happening quite near each other, Reuters reports:
China’s
determination to squeeze as much food and resources as possible from
its land has put thousands of farms close to chemical plants, mines,
and other heavy industries, raising the risks of contamination. …
A
government land survey revealed traces of toxic metals dating back at
least a century as well as pesticides banned in the 1980s, and state
researchers have said that as much as 70 percent of China’s soil
could have problems.
The
result of historical and current industrial production is that 8
million acres — an area Reuters describes as “about the same size
as Belgium” — are so polluted that any food grown there would be
dangerous to eat. It’s already happened: Earlier this year, rice
with scary high levels of the heavy metal cadmium showed up in
markets. The government says it’s going to throw tens of billions
of yuan (or, billions of dollars) at the problem — but it’s not a
good sign when the food grown in large swaths of your country is as
unsafe as food from the backyard of a factory.
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