Post by Paddy by Grace on Mar 29, 2010 15:56:07 GMT -7
China Rushes To Bomb Its Clouds As Rice Prices Spike 10% In A Month
www.businessinsider.com/chinese-rice-prices-spike-10-in-a-month-2010-3
Severe drought in Southwestern China is driving up food prices and heightening concerns about the availability of drinking water.
China Daily:
Huang Weijuan, a Guangzhou housewife, said she spent 55 yuan ($8) to buy a bag of rice in Taojin agricultural bazaar in the city's Yuexiu district over the weekend.
"But the price for the same bag of rice, which weighs 20 kg, was about 50 yuan a month ago," Huang said.
And the price of courgette, a vegetable which mainly grows in Yunnan province, is now selling at 5 yuan per kg in the bazaar, up 0.5 yuan from last month, Huang said.
"The price of many foods and vegetables have gone up in the past month and I worry that prices will keep increasing," she said.
The government is rushing to help in order to alleviate the potential for social tension. In some of the hardest hit provinces, the government has been forced to provide emergency supplies of drinking water to 18 million people. They've also resorted to creating artificial rain through cloud-seeding. Over 3,200 artillery pieces bombarded the sky with chemicals across 77 counties, forcing moderate rain to fall.
"It was the first rain I have seen since last October, but it only lasted for about three hours from 3 am to 6 am this morning," Bu Lupiao, a farmer of Bapiao village in Jinghong county, Xishuangbanna Dai autonomous prefecture.
Since October... That's one heck of a drought. Yet the farmer above was lucky. In Chuxiong Yi prefecture, over 100 cloud seeding guns failed to create rain. Cloud seeding isn't a long-term solution, thus the natural rain better come soon else there could be more pressure on living standards in drought-hit regions.
www.businessinsider.com/chinese-rice-prices-spike-10-in-a-month-2010-3
Severe drought in Southwestern China is driving up food prices and heightening concerns about the availability of drinking water.
China Daily:
Huang Weijuan, a Guangzhou housewife, said she spent 55 yuan ($8) to buy a bag of rice in Taojin agricultural bazaar in the city's Yuexiu district over the weekend.
"But the price for the same bag of rice, which weighs 20 kg, was about 50 yuan a month ago," Huang said.
And the price of courgette, a vegetable which mainly grows in Yunnan province, is now selling at 5 yuan per kg in the bazaar, up 0.5 yuan from last month, Huang said.
"The price of many foods and vegetables have gone up in the past month and I worry that prices will keep increasing," she said.
The government is rushing to help in order to alleviate the potential for social tension. In some of the hardest hit provinces, the government has been forced to provide emergency supplies of drinking water to 18 million people. They've also resorted to creating artificial rain through cloud-seeding. Over 3,200 artillery pieces bombarded the sky with chemicals across 77 counties, forcing moderate rain to fall.
"It was the first rain I have seen since last October, but it only lasted for about three hours from 3 am to 6 am this morning," Bu Lupiao, a farmer of Bapiao village in Jinghong county, Xishuangbanna Dai autonomous prefecture.
Since October... That's one heck of a drought. Yet the farmer above was lucky. In Chuxiong Yi prefecture, over 100 cloud seeding guns failed to create rain. Cloud seeding isn't a long-term solution, thus the natural rain better come soon else there could be more pressure on living standards in drought-hit regions.