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Wasted Chinese Straw 'Could Be Food and Energy Source'
A pilot project
that has turned waste straw into rich cattle food and biogas
could be expanded to help improve food security and rural
energy supply across China, says its leader.
Jiang Gaoming, an ecologist at the Chinese
Academy of Sciences, initiated the programme in Pingyi County,
in eastern China in an effort to find a better use for the
700 million tonnes of straw produced annually in China, of
which 37 per cent is burned. Less than a quarter is used as
food.
By adding bacteria to the waste straw
his team was able to ferment it to produce "bread grass".
This has been used to raise cattle in the village. Dung from
the cattle is turned into methane a source of electricity
and cooking fuel at one of 120 household biogas plants
built under houses in the village.
So far 30 cattle are being raised in the
village. Interim results from the project show that beef cattle
weighing 200 kilograms grew to 420 kilograms in seven months
when fed bread grass. A family with three cattle can earn
more than 7,000 Chinese yuan (US$1,025) per year from selling
the beef, says Jiang.
His goal is to raise 200300 cattle,
build 200 biogas plants, and set up a small biogas power plant
for the whole village.
In addition, Jiang estimates that an amount
of fertiliser equal to around twice the annual consumption
in China can potentially be generated from the sediment and
liquid waste from the biogas plant.
But the model has financial obstacles
to tackle. With average income less than 4,600 yuan per year
in Pingyi County, many farmers cannot afford to buy calves.
And large-scale raising of livestock cannot be maintained
in places like Pingyi, where urbanisation is decreasing the
amount of available arable land.
"We are appealing to the government
to provide microcredit loans for the farmers to buy the calves
at the beginning," Jiang says. And according to a national
plan on the overall use of land passed by the State Council
of China last August, the Chinese government has legally protected
120 million hectares of farmland.
Wang Kun, a professor of animal
husbandry at China Agricultural University, says Jiang's practice
is a good example of ecological agriculture. But considering
the low-protein and high-fibre quality of straw, he says,
other high-protein food such as clover must be added to guarantee
nutrition for the cattle.
Source: SciDev Net
Date: 05 March 2009

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