1. An estimation of the extent of cropland abandonment in mountainous regions of China
- Author
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Guenther Fischer, Xiubin Li, Shengfa Li, Laixiang Sun, G.-Y. Cao, and Sylvia Tramberend
- Subjects
Food security ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Agricultural machinery ,business.industry ,Abandonment (legal) ,Soil Science ,Land consolidation ,010501 environmental sciences ,Development ,01 natural sciences ,Agricultural economics ,Geography ,Agriculture ,Population projection ,Environmental Chemistry ,Fixed asset ,business ,China ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
With the wages for migrant workers increasing dramatically in China since 2003, the size of the agricultural labour forces has been shrinking rapidly. Intensively substituting agricultural machinery for the shrinking farm labour force is hardly possible for croplands in the mountainous regions of China where mechanization is difficult to achieve due to small field size and rough terrain. This has eventually led to cropland abandonment in these regions. Considering the high pressure for food security in China, cropland abandonment in the mountainous regions should not be ignored. By employing a novel method, this study estimates the extent of recently abandoned croplands (period 2000-2010) and the changes that can be expected in the future in China's mountainous areas. The results show that the total extent of abandoned croplands in Chinese mountainous counties during the period 2000 to 2010 is estimated at 147 million mu (1 mu=666.67m2); in total, about 28% of croplands in mountainous counties was abandoned, including croplands converted in the Grain for Green Programme (GGP). With three scenario assumptions, a sizeable extent, 114 to 203 million mu, of croplands may be abandoned from 2010 to 2030 with the rapid decrease and aging of projected farm labour forces. This could exacerbate the future challenges of maintaining China's food security. A substantial increase in agricultural project investments, including land consolidation and agricultural productive fixed assets, especially micro-tillage machines, could help mitigate the risk of cropland abandonment. Additionally, land-use and environmental policymaking should take into account the expanding cropland abandonment in mountainous regions.
- Published
- 2018
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