SUDAH GILAKAH CHINA?
HAVE THE CHINESE GONE MAD?
Assalaamua'laikum Warahmatullaahi Wabarakaatuh
High rice flats! The lush paddy field that sits on top of a block of flats
Assalaamua'laikum Warahmatullaahi Wabarakaatuh
Don't be angry, the title of this blog is just a joke !!!!. Nothing racial.
When I was the Minister of Agriculture before I went back to the State
of Kedah to become the Menteri Besar, land was an issue. As MADA is
regarded as a model of a developed rice-growing area in Kedah, funded by
the World Bank, the acreage for the Muda Agricultural Development
Authority (MADA) could not be used for other than padi planting.
Padi is of course a necessity but padi farmers are also
associated with poverty. Growing rice in small acreages is therefore
similar to growing or perpetuating poverty. Short of replacing the padi
with oil palm the income of the padi farmers can only be increased by
doubling or tripling the production per acre of padi. New clones need to
be found. In addition the farmers have to get involved in other
economic activities such as making biscuits, cakes, handicrafts, rearing
domestic animals and growing vegetables and fruit trees etc..etc..
Instead of reducing the acreage of padi fields I have asked
investors to go to the non-padi areas for their housing and other
industrial projects. If they are brave enough they should reclaim the
sea.
But then, in the process of growing padi much fertilizer and
water are wasted as the rain-water and the water from the dam just
lingers through the padi fields to the rivers and the sea while the
fertilizer just sip into the ground.
As such, how about roof-top farming? The farmers in Kedah can
build concrete houses in the padi fields without actually sacrificing
the acreage, but by just growing them on the flat, well thought of
structure on the roof-tops. With cement flooring the water will not flow
away and the fertilizer stays. Piping would have to be provided for
water circulation.
When I mentioned this idea the media went to town to harass what
was considered as my weird thought. Cartoons were drawn and I appeared
like a clown. Quietly I requested the Malaysian Agricultural Research
and Development Institute (MARDI) to build a structure in Butterworth
for padi growing on the roof top. I was told that it was viable. But the
press was not supportive. Later on as Menteri Besar of Kedah and
Chairman of MADA I requested that a house be built for a library in the
vicinity of Paya Pahlawan in the district of Kubang Pasu. We could grow
padi three times a year on the roof-top of the library without water and
fertilizer shortage and wastage. It was very viable. But no one was listening. Short of calling me mad, they said that it was a crazy idea.
Below is a press
report of such an endeavor being undertaken by the Chinese. Have the
Chinese gone mad" Thus the tile of this entry.
High rice flats! The lush paddy field that sits on top of a block of flats
- Peng Qiugen has transformed his rooftop in Shaoxing in east China's Zhejiang provice into a fertile farmland
- Grows rice, watermelons and vegetables on the 120-square-metre paddy, which sits more than 40 feet above ground
By SOPHIE JANE EVANS
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2509360/Chinese-farmer-transforms-roof-fertile-farmland.html
PUBLISHED: 16:29 GMT, 18 November 2013 |
UPDATED: 17:45 GMT, 18 November 2013
Where do you find the space to harvest rice in
a city of more than 4million people?
On the roof of your house, according to one
Chinese farmer.
Peng Qiugen has transformed the rooftop of his
four-storey house in Shaoxing in east China's Zhejiang province into a fertile
farmland.
As well as rice, he grows watermelons,
vegetables and other crops on the 120-square-metre paddy, which sits more than
40 feet above the ground.
The farmer has dedicated months to harvesting
his produce since completing the rooftop conversion several years ago.
His
unusual creation has drawn the attention of locals in the overcrowded city -
with many offering to help Mr Qiugen harvest his crops.
It also appears to have solved a difficult
conundrum faced by many countries around the world - how to produce enough food
for an ever-increasing population when land and space is rapidly running out.
Despite its alternative appearance, Mr
Qiugen's rice paddy has boasted an impressive harvest year on year, according
to China Daily.
It has produced a 30 per cent higher yield
than is expected on ground-level land - with a staggering 400kg of watermelons
grown on the roof in 2012 alone.
And this year, the farmland's produce is
reportedly sufficient enough to feed an adult for a whole year.
However, despite its success, agricultural
experts have warned that people should seek out professional advice before
attempting to cultivate farmlands on top of their homes.
It is not the first time a novel creation has
been erected in Shaoxing, which has a population of about 4.3million people.
Earlier this year, the world's longest and
widest multi-pylon cable-stayed bridge was opened in the city - which is
situated 200km south-east of Shanghai - following seven years of construction
work.
The Jiaxing-Shaoxing Sea Bridge, which
stretches 6.2miles over the Hangzhou Bay, is supported by two cable towers -
each one towering a whopping 745ft in the air.
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