73.28 billion catties - Inner Mongolia's grain output achieves "17 consecutive harvests"

Published 2020년 12월 11일

Tridge summary

In 2020, Inner Mongolia's total grain output reached 73.28 billion catties, an increase of 0.3% from the previous year, fulfilling the state's grain production targets and achieving the '17 Lianfeng' rank, which places it 8th in the country. This marks the third year of consistent grain output above 70 billion catties despite the epidemic. The region's agricultural departments implemented various subsidy and policy release strategies that significantly boosted farmer morale and grain production. These initiatives, including the 'Potato Industry Rise' plan in Hulunbuir, the 'Ten Opinions on Vigorously Developing High-quality Wheat' in Bayannaoer City, and Ordos City's support for the miscellaneous grains and beans industry, played a key role in overcoming the challenges posed by the epidemic and ensuring a successful grain harvest.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

China News Service, Hohhot, December 11 (Reporter Li Aiping Uyana) The Department of Agriculture and Animal Husbandry of Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region stated on the 11th that the total grain output in Inner Mongolia reached 73.28 billion catties in 2020, an increase of 230 million catties or 0.3% over the previous year. Achieved "17 Lianfeng", ranking 8th in the country, and overfulfilling the state's grain production targets in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. This data also means that the total grain output of Inner Mongolia has remained above 70 billion catties for three consecutive years. Under the epidemic , How can Inner Mongolia's grain output achieve the "17 consecutive harvests"? According to the official statement, during the critical period before spring planting, Inner Mongolia issued 14.6 billion yuan in corn, soybean, potato producer subsidies and arable land subsidies, of which 427 million yuan was added for potato production subsidies. Inner Mongolia's ...
Source: Chinaeconomy

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