by nicolas » Mar 21st, '10, 20:31
Commodity prices rocket as drought hits
Choi Chi-yuk
SCMP Mar 22, 2010
Prices of several agricultural commodities are skyrocketing on the mainland as a once-in-a-century drought scorches southwest China.
Commodities the region is known for - including cane sugar, flowers, tea, fruit, rubber and coffee - have taken a beating as unusually high temperatures, dry conditions and up to 80 per cent less rainfall than last year, reduced output by as much as 50 per cent, state broadcaster CCTV reported yesterday.
Yunnan, Guizhou, Guangxi, Sichuan and Chongqing have been hit by drought since September.
Cane sugar prices have risen nearly 25 per cent since November, while export prices for flowers have jumped by about 50 per cent compared with the same period last year, according to industry insiders.
Wei Guojian, secretary general of the Guangxi Sugarcane Association, said yesterday that the wholesale price of a tonne of white sugar had increased by 23.8 per cent, from 4,200 yuan (HK$4,774) in November to 5,200 yuan.
"This rare price surge is mainly due to a significant reduction in the sugar production resulting from the drought in Yunnan," Wei said. "As far as I know, sugar produced by the province has dropped from 2.25 million tonnes last year to 1.6 million tonnes this year."
Sugar cane is harvested between November and March.
Guangxi accounts for nearly 70 per cent of the country's sugar production, while Yunnan is the second-biggest producer.
Wei insisted that Guangxi's sugar cane crop had suffered relatively little compared with that of Yunnan, where the cane fields were hit hard by drought.
But a Nanning-based industry insider said yesterday that Guangxi had sustained a severe loss in terms of sugar production. He said the region produced just 6.8 million tonnes of white sugar, a year-on-year drop of 830,000 tonnes, or nearly 11 per cent.
"Sugar at 5,200 yuan per tonne is without doubt the highest price for at least three years," said the owner of a sugar trading company who declined to be named.
He added that Chongzuo, the largest production site for sugarcane in Guangxi, as well as Baise and Hechi , were among the areas hardest hit.
But, he said, Laibin, the second-biggest sugar cane production base in the region, was affected only moderately.
"The quality of grade-A sugar manufactured by our country is not good when compared with that available in the international market. Hence, only a negligible amount is exported," the industry insider said. He said that Ng Fung Hong - a Hong Kong company - was one of the few importers of sugar from Guangxi.
The wholesale price of flowers, mainly roses, planted in Yunnan and exported to Hong Kong, has soared about 50 per cent compared with last year, Hu Yang , of Yunnan Lidu Flower Development, said yesterday.
Yunnan, the mainland's largest flower producer, exported US$760,000 worth of the commodity in 2008. The province sends about 14,000 roses to Hong Kong every day, and exports tens of thousands of flowers to overseas markets including Japan, Russia and Thailand.
"Looking at the big picture, the quantity of flowers produced in our province has plummeted from one million to roughly 700,000 a day, but the price has risen some 50 per cent from last year," Hu said.
"A top-quality red rose, for instance, used to be sold at between one yuan and 1.5 yuan, but this year, prices range from 1.5 yuan to two yuan because of the drought," she said. The price of a bouquet of 20 carnations, one of the most popular choices of Japanese customers, was about 50 fen, up from 30 fen this time last year.
Aside from price and quantity, Hu said the quality of flowers had also been affected by poor irrigation resulting from the extremely dry weather.
Tea producers in Yunnan said they expected Puer prices to rise 30 per cent to 100 per cent this year because of the drought, according to Nanfang Daily. The drought has affected 200,000 hectares of tea plantations and destroyed more than 3,300 hectares of tea trees in Yunnan since autumn, an official with the department overseeing tea trade in the province told the China News Service yesterday.
Meanwhile, Premier Wen Jiabao called for intensified and consistent efforts to ease drought and help those affected, as he wrapped up a three-day trip to Qujing , one of the hard-hit regions in Yunnan, yesterday, Xinhua reported.
About 51 million people have been affected by the drought, including more than three million in Guizhou who were facing food shortages.
The temperature in downtown Chongqing hit 32 degrees Celsius yesterday, and high temperatures led to a wildfire in one district of the municipality which destroyed more than 20 hectares of plantations.
Food prices soar in drought-hit Yunnan
Social unrest fears grow amid grain shortages
Choi Chi-yuk
SCMP Mar 20, 2010
Staple food prices in some areas hit hard by the severe drought in Yunnan , where seven million people face grain shortages, have risen by roughly 40 per cent over the past month, residents said yesterday.
The provincial civil affairs bureau said more than half of the province's summer grain would be destroyed by the severe drought, which would cost the province 10 billion yuan (HK$11.3 billion) just from crop failure, a report carried by the Xinhuanet news portal added.
Meng Jiaxue , a primary school teacher in the town of Fucun in Qujing , said yesterday that he was very worried about social stability in the local community due to panic and anxiety triggered by the rapidly rising cost of basic food as a result of the once-in-a-century drought that began in September.
"For example, the price of a 25kg bag of rice is now 105 yuan to 110 yuan while it only cost us about 75 to 80 yuan before the Lunar New Year," Meng, 46, said. "Aside from grain, prices of other staple foods, including vegetables and cooking oil, have also risen by between 5 per cent to 30 per cent over the past month.
"Worst of all, living costs have kept rising and rising, with the prices of basic necessities even surging in just two days," he said. "That, in turn, may prompt chaos and even threaten social stability here.
Meng said other residents shared his fears, with unconfirmed but widely-circulated news reports saying that food had been stolen nearby and that others had begun stockpiling grain for speculation.
Yunnan Daily said provincial party secretary Bai Enpei had pledged to protect people from the drought, saying: "Millions of residents in our province are now struggling against shortages of drinking water and food. Ensuring them a normal living is the overriding priority [for local government]."
Flower prices have also risen markedly. The province accounts for 80 per cent of the mainland's flower supply, but more than 30,000 hectares, or approximately 80 per cent, of its flower fields have been affected by the disaster, an official with the Yunnan Provincial Flower Industry Office told Xinhua.
The official said the price of a good quality rose had recently surged to four yuan, more than double the price this time last year.
Yunnan is also the mainland's second largest sugar producer but output is expected to fall by 30 per cent or 4.5 million tonnes this year. Sugar prices in Beijing have already risen to 6.5 yuan a kilogram, compared to 5.8 yuan in January.
Meanwhile, an official with Yunnan's flood control and drought relief command was quoted by China Economic Times as warning that up to 10.14 million people - a quarter of the province's population - could face drinking water shortages if the drought did not break before May.
Meng said the residents of Fucun had to fetch water from five kilometres away.
The Central Meteorological Observatory in Beijing predicted on Thursday that the drought would worsen, with no substantial rainfall expected for the next 10 days.
During a meeting in Beijing yesterday, unnamed officials of the National Disaster Reduction Committee said more than 51 million people were suffering from the drought in Guizhou , Yunnan, Guangxi , Sichuan and Chongqing , Xinhua said.
More than 10,000 armed police had been dispatched to the five regions to help with relief efforts.
Drought forces Yunnan to ration power
Reuters in Beijing
Updated on Mar 16, 2010
Yunnan province was preparing to cut power supplies to a growing number of energy-intensive and high-polluting firms as a severe drought in the region sapped hydropower output in the region, a local government official said on Tuesday.
“The government has drafted a plan that would prioritise power supply to residents and some important users while further curbing flows to energy-intensive firms,” said the official who is familiar with local power industry but who declined to be named because he is not an authorised spokesperson.
“All backup generators have been mobilised and electricity flows to Guangdong have been cut,” he said.
“The scope and extent of power restrictions will be decided by the developments in demand-and-supply situations.”
Yunnan, whose hydropower stations account for nearly 70 per cent of capacity in the province, has been facing difficulty to generate enough power for its own needs since late last year because of the worst drought conditions in more than half a century.
At least 30 per cent of the regions in Yunnan have power shortage problems, state media have said.
“We expect the rainy season will only come in mid April or May,” the official said.
China's Southern Power Grid, one of two state grid firms, expects tight power supplies in April and May in regions it covers because of low water levels, its former chairman, Yuan Maozhen, said on March 4.
The grid, which covers Yunnan, Guizhou, Guangxi, Guangdong and Hainan provinces, has reduced power flows from Yunnan to Guangdong by 1.25 billion kilowatt hours (kWh) in March.
It has cut flows from Yunnan to Guangdong by 4.23 billion kWh so far this year, according to the grid.