男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
Global EditionASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
Opinion
Home / Opinion / Chinese Perspectives

Sustained foray into smart agriculture

By Hu Bingchuan | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2025-12-30 07:18
Share
Share - WeChat

LI MIN/CHINA DAILY

China's smart agriculture development is charting a distinct "dual-track" path: one cutting-edge track unfolding in the laboratories and highly capitalized commercial settings, representing the global frontier of agri-tech; the other, and more profound, track taking root within the vast smallholder system, driving a gradual yet systemic transformation of traditional farming practices.

In R&D and large-scale corporate applications, China's smart agriculture has entered a phase of deep integration. Unmanned farms, smart ranches, and industrialized breeding complexes are emerging nationwide. Advanced sensors, algorithms and systems are injecting unprecedented efficiency and stability.

For example, Muyuan Foods' modern breeding complex in Neixiang county, Henan province, represents a 5-billion-yuan ($713.59 million) investment. Spanning over 187 hectares with 21 multistory pigsties, it integrates 85,000 sets of intelligent equipment. Sensors monitor conditions in real time, automatically adjusting ventilation, feeding and cleaning, producing 2.1 million hogs annually — making once-unimaginable scale and efficiency a reality.

This model systematically restructures traditionally labor-intensive processes. A minimal management team can sustain stable, large-scale output, drastically cutting labor costs and disease risk while boosting controllability and standardization.

However, this capital-intensive form is not the full picture of China's agricultural transformation.

The deepest impact lies in the gradual transformation of hundreds of millions of smallholder units. At the core of this transformation is the fact that it is not turning farmers into corporations, but reshaping their productivity through technological services and platform-based tools.

A prime example is drone-based crop protection. In the coming years, China is expected to see substantial growth in the scale of drone-based crop protection operations, alongside a further reduction in application costs. Crucially, diffusion does not require ownership. Most smallholders access high-level services on demand from providers at low cost. This "technology-as-a-service" model significantly lowers the barrier to entry.

Drone-based crop protection also spurs rural low-altitude economies. In mountainous regions, poor roads historically hampered transport. Now, logistics drones enable direct farm-to-hub shipment, slashing time and cost. In Xianju county, Zhejiang province, drones transport bayberries down mountains in 3-5 minutes instead of over half an hour, cutting loss rates significantly. Combined with technologies such as digital intelligent sorting, the freshness and quality of bayberries has markedly improved. These quality enhancements have led to a noticeable increase in the farm gate price of premium bayberries, contributing to substantial income growth for the growers.

A key feature is the high synchronization of R&D, application and improvement. Taking drone operation as an example, the early stage often involved "one pilot operating one device", with limited daily coverage. With the continuous iteration of technologies such as autonomous flight, multi-drone coordinated dispatch systems, and digital field maps, it is now possible for one person to oversee multiple drones simultaneously, significantly enhancing individual operational efficiency compared to before. Technologies such as precision variable-rate spraying are also maturing. Using multi-sensor data and artificial intelligence, drones apply chemicals only where needed — normal dosage in high-risk areas, reduced in low-risk, and none in disease-free zones. This "on-demand" approach substantially reduces overall pesticide use. The cycle from lab to field has shortened, following a rapid "use-feedback-upgrade" path that accelerates adoption.

Smart agriculture reshapes support systems and value realization, creating new space for smallholders.

Consider rural finance. Traditionally, loans relied on costly offline assessments and collateral. Now, data assets from smart farming — like UAV-sprayed areas, input purchases, and sales — can, when anonymized and compliant, serve as credit assessment tools. This "data-based credit" improves access to inclusive finance.

Smart agriculture also meets personalized needs. In niche sectors such as specialty mushroom cultivation, digital platforms can quickly match farmers with technical solutions, supplies and sales channels, slashing information search costs.

Influencers such as Tian Xiaoyu, a "post-95s" entrepreneur in Fujian province, use Douyin (TikTok) to showcase local mushroom products and create recipe-based goods such as soup packs. Such demonstrations inspire farmers to learn improved techniques and explore product development, shifting from raw material production toward an integrated "production + processing + marketing" model.

For value realization, e-commerce and live-streaming have become "new farm tools". Farmers broadcast directly from fields, showcasing products to broader markets, shortening supply chains, improving bargaining power and diversifying income.

China's smart agriculture is therefore not about a single disruptive technology but a sustained application of technologies that gradually changes practices. In large demonstrations, it pushes efficiency to its limits. On a vast scale, its greater role is making advanced tech and modern services accessible and affordable for ordinary smallholders — through socialized services, digital platforms, and data. This enables them to cut costs, improve efficiency and achieve stable income growth without expanding land or changing their fundamental status as farmers.

The author is a research fellow at Rural Development Institute, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

The views don't necessarily reflect those of China Daily.

If you have a specific expertise, or would like to share your thought about our stories, then send us your writings at opinion@chinadaily.com.cn, and comment@chinadaily.com.cn.

Most Viewed in 24 Hours
Top
BACK TO THE TOP
English
Copyright 1994 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US
主站蜘蛛池模板: 绥德县| 遂川县| 陇川县| 东丽区| 义马市| 泽普县| 祁连县| 原平市| 商洛市| 平远县| 封丘县| 西乌珠穆沁旗| 扎兰屯市| 安塞县| 绩溪县| 金川县| 七台河市| 龙海市| 云林县| 响水县| 聊城市| 拉萨市| 临邑县| 浮梁县| 辛集市| 贺州市| 汉寿县| 张家口市| 洪雅县| 文昌市| 郧西县| 崇左市| 揭阳市| 长顺县| 永福县| 大厂| 清镇市| 资阳市| 古浪县| 白水县| 衡东县| 卫辉市| 共和县| 江西省| 汨罗市| 宝清县| 仁化县| 青浦区| 杭州市| 界首市| 新安县| 营山县| 株洲县| 婺源县| 齐齐哈尔市| 通城县| 镇平县| 兴安盟| 昌黎县| 巨野县| 敦煌市| 新乐市| 龙游县| 英德市| 安乡县| 越西县| 湟中县| 乡城县| 永德县| 常宁市| 巴林左旗| 苏州市| 洪雅县| 青河县| 湘阴县| 澄江县| 武冈市| 清水县| 通榆县| 皮山县| 漯河市| 桃园县|