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Not Just Manufactured Items, China Wants To Focus On Home-Grown Seeds

China has for the first time stressed on the need to strengthen the homegrown seed industry and is developing a blueprint that guides the country's agricultural sector

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Not Just Manufactured Items, China Wants To Focus On Home-Grown Seeds
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A country that specialises in ‘Make for the World’, and is dubbed as the global manufacturing hub, is being forced to make new things in their own country. For the first time, China, the vendor to the world, is feeling the need to strengthen its domestic seed industry.

China has for the first time stressed on the need to strengthen the homegrown seed industry and is developing a blueprint that guides the country's agricultural sector, say media reports.

Trade frictions with the United States of America, Australia and Canada have brought the lesson home to China’s policymakers that imports of agricultural products face restrictions and restraints.

Improving domestic seed industry will be the key in addressing many of the agricultural problems China has to face today, China’s Global Times reported quoting analysts.

Seeds have been dubbed as the "semiconductor microchips" of the agricultural sector and Chinese analysts said the "turning-the-table campaign" in the $15 billion seed industry comes at the right time.

According to Global Times, China now plans to tackle core bottlenecks in agricultural technologies in its new stage of rural development, aiming to "turn the table" in the seed industry to maintain grain security after a major policy meeting that took place in Beijing earlier.

While addressing the annual central rural work conference in Beijing, President Xi Jinping had stressed that efforts must be made to promote the efficiency and quality of the agricultural sector and called to boost core technological breakthroughs in the agricultural sector in a bid to seek scientific and technological self-reliance, reported Xinhua News Agency.

A statement published after the meeting too reflected some of the broader challenges faced by China's agricultural sector - from a possible bottleneck like those faced by some of the country's best technology companies to meet the improved demand of the Chinese people for quality agricultural produce, added Global Times.

Although China does not face an immediate risk in grain seed supplies, the country still lags in bioengineering and biotechnology in several areas, from certain types of agricultural produce to animals that provide protein.