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Environmental Stressors and Food Security in China
Authors:Jerry McBeath  Jenifer Huang McBeath
Institution:(1) University of Alaska Faribanks, 1777 Red Fox Drive, Fairbanks, AK 99709, USA
Abstract:This article considers the immediate forces influencing China’s food system and food security. By immediate is meant events of the reform period, from the late 1970s to 2008. It begins by asking the question that has preoccupied specialists since the publication of Lester Brown’s Who Will Feed China? in 1995: How much arable land does China have? Is that land area sufficient to insure grain sufficiency? To insure food security? The article focuses on the human pressures on the food production environment, and then treats the effects of socioeconomic change: land, air, and water degradation. The core of the article examines six responses of the state to both perceived and actual environmental stressors: policy restricting arable land conversion, China’s one-child policy, investment in irrigation systems, the South–North Water Diversion Project, large-scale afforestation and reforestation campaigns, and the program to convert marginal agricultural lands to forests and grasslands.
Keywords:Food System  Food Security  Arable Land  Urbanization  Economic Development  Erosion  Deforestation  Desertification  Land Pollution  Air Pollution  Water Sufficiency  Water Pollution  Ocean Pollution  One-Child Policy  South–  North Water Diversion Project  Afforestation  Reforestation  Slope Land Conversion Program (“  Grain to Green”  )
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