An expert walks past a sign on experimental farmland near the China-Kazakhstan border. Ren Qi / China Daily While energy remains the core of cooperation between China and Kazakhstan, the two nations have also cultivated agricultural links in recent years. In a field near the western foot of Tianshan Mountain, which forms a natural border between the countries, wheat is being grown from Chinese seeds on 200 hectares of land. Yangling Modern Agriculture Demonstration Park Development and Construction, a company in Shaanxi province, has been using the land to test crops since 2015, when it entered into a strategic cooperation partnership with the Kazakhstan International Integration Foundation. We've grown 27 different varieties in six main categories: wheat; corn; oilseed rape; soybeans; vegetables; and green seedlings, said Cui Weijun, assistant to Yangling's chairman. We've also introduced new technology and seen highly positive results. We started a wheat-planting experiment in 2015, and our output now is 82.3 percent higher than that at local farms. The pilot project is being carried out 70 kilometers from Almaty, the former Kazakh capital, which has a similar arid climate to Shaanxi in northwestern China, he added. In addition to the high output, the cooperation has also created more than 50 jobs so far, according to Cui, who said the ratio of Kazakh employees to Chinese is 4-to-1, while more than half of the management team was hired locally. Kazakhstan, the ninth-largest country in the world, has seven climate belts, which indicates huge potential for a range of agricultural projects. Cui expects to see cooperation expanded and more jobs created for both Chinese and Kazakhs. The testing ground is rented by a joint venture established by Yangling and the integration foundation, which was founded in 1994. Sergey Tereshchenko, the former prime minister of Kazakhstan, is the foundation's chairman. Foreign companies are prohibited from owning or renting land in Kazakhstan. Manshuk Zhexembekova, who rents farmland to the venture, said the operation has gone smoothly, adding that as the experiment moves into its third year, the Chinese company is trying something different. For instance, the agricultural experts from Yangling wanted to build a greenhouse on the field to raise the number of crop varieties, she said. Bai Yuhao works in the foundation's office in Shaanxi. He regularly flies to Almaty with experts from Yangling to handle relations with Kazakh farmers and government officials. He said some local experts have been surprised by the yields the project has produced: For example, we've been able to harvest 319 kg per mu (0.06 hectares) of No 5 wheat, while local wheat can only produce 175 kg per mu. According to Bai, the average temperature in Kazakhstan is lower than in Shaanxi, but between noon and midnight the difference is much larger, so the Chinese seeds grow better in Almaty. Yu Jianwei, a Yingling manager responsible for dry farming - cultivation without irrigation - said developing the business has been more difficult than anticipated. Most of the problems arise from the differences in laws in the two countries. In addition to the rules on renting land, Yangling is unable to sell its crops in Kazakhstan because foreign seeds need at least three good harvests before they can be sold in the Kazakh market. Therefore, the initial stage of the venture has been focused on introducing technology and training farmers, Yu said, adding that skills such as seeding and irrigation are not as advanced as in China, and most Kazakh farmers lack experience of handling modern farm machinery. To convince the integration foundation to establish longer-term cooperation, Yangling has conducted planting tests to produce tangible results, and invited agriculture experts to join communications efforts and offer training. Despite the difficulties, Yu sees great potential for agricultural cooperation between China and Kazakhstan as the Belt and Road Initiative develops. We started our project just two years ago, and Yangling is planning to bring more Chinese crops to our neighbor. I believe agricultural exchanges will hit higher levels as the two countries improve cooperation under the Belt and Road Initiative, he said. silicone bracelets cheap
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Instructors provide door-to-door guidance to protect environment HANGZHOU - Starting in 2016, Chen Xuefen, a garbage-sorting instructor in Zhejiang province, has been "talking trash" with the help of her smartphone. She scans the QR code on any garbage bag in a trash can and immediately knows who threw it away. "We get free garbage bags from our community committee. Each household is given bags with a different QR code," Chen said. If residents don't sort the waste correctly, instructors come to their homes and show them how to do it properly. "In the past, we had no idea who had thrown what away," Chen said. Chen is one of the hundreds of garbage-sorting instructors in Huachuan community, where she and another 10,000-plus residents live. As volunteers, the instructors are meant to help residents manage their trash, especially in the kitchen, which accounts for 50 percent of all household waste. "In Huachuan, more than 90 percent of residents currently know how to sort household waste," Chen said. Built in the 1980s, Huachuan generates about 1,500 liters of garbage a day, which was previously dumped and taken away, and then burned or buried. Though Zhejiang introduced garbage sorting in 2010, progress was initially less than satisfactory. Since 2012, Huachuan's public trash bins have been divided by "kitchen waste", "recyclables", "hazardous waste" and "other". Every year, the community spends about 300,000 yuan ($45,000) on bins and bags to encourage residents to separate their own waste. In 2016, the bags with QR codes appeared. Yu Fuling, Huachuan's Party secretary, said sorting household waste is of great importance. "If trash is not sorted, waste cannot be fully reused or recycled, and the disposal process is harder," Yu said. According to Yu, workers in Huachuan create brochures and give lectures on how to sort garbage, and they organize volunteers to provide door-to-door guidance. Currently, the rate of household garbage sorting in Huachuan is about 70 percent, Yu said. In Zhejiang, 11 cities have run waste-sorting campaigns for households, and the disposal rate of harmless urban household waste has reached 99.3 percent. The province has 110 disposal facilities for household waste and more than 1,800 garbage transfer stations. Another 16 disposal facilities are under construction and will be operational by the end of this year, increasing the province's garbage disposal capacity to 70,000 tons per day. Xinhua
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