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WUXI, Jiangsu, June 20 (Xinhua) -- Yuan Longping, known as the "father of hybrid rice", said on Sunday that his team was working on a new version of high-yield hybrid rice and might complete it in 2012.Yuan, director of the National Hybrid Rice Engineering Technology Research Center and a faculty member of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, made the remarks at the World Expo's third theme forum, which opened on Sunday in Wuxi, in east China's Jiangsu Province.The new hybrid, the phase-III super hybrid rice, was expected to yield 13.5 tonnes of rice per hectare, Yuan said.The previous hybrid, the second-generation super hybrid, was released for commercial production in 2006, yielding 9 tonnes of rice per hectare, on averageRice is a major food crop that feeds more than half of the world's population, Yuan said.China is now planting 440 million mu (29 million hectares) of rice per year, with an average output capacity of 6.3 tonnes per hectare.Among the acreage, hybrid rice accounts for about 57 percent of the total, with an average output capacity of 7.2 tonnes per hectare."The average yield of hybrid rice is at least 20 percent more than that of inbred rice, feeding 70 million more people annually," Yuan said.China is faced with a challenging grain situation this summer because of strong rainfalls in the south during the summer harvest season. Other problems include droughts in northern grain production areas and lingering low temperatures in the south.According to the Ministry of Agriculture, China needs to maintain an annual grain output of 500 million tonnes to feed the nation's 1.3 billion people.China's summer grain output rose six years in a row to top 123.35 million tonnes in 2009, which was 2.6 million tonnes more than the previous year."Hybrid rice will play a key role in ensuring food security worldwide in the new century," Yuan said."If 50 percent of the world's rice paddies were planted with hybrids, rice production could be increased by another 150 million tonnes, and 400 to 500 million more people could be fed," he said.Yuan believes food security is "a war people can not afford to lose" ."The global economic downturn will always end, but food security is the problem we have to face every second," Yuan said.Statistics from the United Nations showed about 1 billion people were suffering from hunger and malnutrition and every six seconds saw a child dying of hunger or related diseases.With the theme "science & technology innovation and urban future", the two-day forum focuses on innovations in science and technology.The previous two theme forums of the World Expo centered on communications and cultural heritages.Yuan started working on hybrid rice in 1964."I often drive my car to go to rice paddies to do research," said the 80-year-old, "The only difference is that when I was young, I rode a bicycle or motorcycle ....you could attribute it to improving life."Hybrid rice has also been commercialized in other countries, including India, Vietnam, the Philippines, Bangladesh and the United States."For the benefits of the world' s people, we are well prepared to help other countries develop hybrid rice," he said.
BEIJING, July 19 (Xinhuanet) -- Expo 2010 Shanghai is proving to be a boon for successful Chinese entrepreneurs eager to tap into the global market.The 184-day event, which is predicted to attract an estimated 4 million foreign visitors along with global media coverage, is considered to be a golden opportunity for Chinese companies to raise their brands to an international level and explore business opportunities.According to survey released last year by the information office of Shanghai Municipal Government, more than a quarter of the respondents were hoping to visit Shanghai during the Expo to seek future business.The online survey polled 503 foreigners in 44 countries and regions across the world, 30 percent of whom were senior corporate executives.Of the Expo's 58 partners and official sponsors, 47 are Chinese companies, 25 are from Shanghai, 15 are from Beijing and seven from other parts of the country. They contributed a total of more than 7 billion yuan ( billion) in sponsorship fees to the event, averaging more than 100 million each.While the sums are large, the contributors represent only a small portion of the number Chinese firms that want a slice of the Expo pie. Those who are not qualified to partner an official sponsor have sought other means of gaining brand exposure."The Expo is a once-in-a-century opportunity for us to promote our brand on an international scale," said Zhang Yingguang, a public relations manager for Tsingdao Beer, the Chinese industry leader based in Qingdao, Shandong province.The company launched a flurry of billboard advertisements on the city's busiest streets, as well as in metro stations and commercial areas. The ads targeted foreigners by trying to teach them Chinese phrases about drinking.It also made a presence in the Zero Carbon Pavilion at the Expo, where it contributed lamps made out of beer bottles and launched a gourmet TV show with a local TV station.
LHASA, Tibet, June 8 (Xinhua) -- The 11th Panchen Lama on Tuesday visited rural homes in Shannan Prefecture and chatted with peasants before finishing his first visit to this part of southern Tibet."I never dreamed a Living Buddha would come to my home," said Mila, 49, a resident in Ztang Township.The maroon-robed Panchen Lama sat with Mila on a bench in the family's bright new concrete house and talked about a wide range of issues including local living standards, incomes and religious life.The 11th Panchen Lama gives head-touch blessings to local devotees in front of Sanyai Monastery in Nedong County of Shannan Prefecture, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, on June 8, 2010. The 11th Panchen Lama finised Tuesday the two-day visit in south Tibet's Shannan Prefecture where he held large prayer services and gave head-touch blessings to more than 5,000 local devotees.Patting the head of a three-year-old, the Panchen Lama, now in his 20s, told Mila's family to give the children a good education. He also told the family to work hard for a prosperous life."I will pray for you," the Panchen Lama said.The Panchen Lama gave head-touch blessings to locals as he walked from home to home. He also prayed at the thirteen-century-old Sanyai Monastery.The Panchen Lama started his tour to Shannan on Monday for his first visit to the area honored as the cradle of Tibetan civilization since he was enthroned as a Tibetan Buddhist leader in 1995.He returned to Lhasa late Tuesday.The 11th Panchen Lama, who spends most of his time since the enthronement studying Buddhism in Beijing, started his annual Tibet tour last Thursday, during which he visited a number of monasteries and participated in a variety of Buddhist events.
BEIJING, June 8 (Xinhua) -- China's central authorities have promised to treat talents in private companies and social organizations the same as their counterparts in the public sector to facilitate personnel mobility and sustainable development in the private sector.According to the newly unveiled National Medium- and Long-term Talent Development Plan (2010-2020), non-public economic groups and social organizations can enjoy equal treatment in government policy on the training, attracting, appraisal, and use of talents.Specialists in the private sector should be incorporated into talent development projects of various governments, the document said.They can have "equal access to public resources including funds, projects and information for supporting innovation and starting businesses," the document also said.The national plan, a blueprint for creating a highly skilled national work force over the next decade, aims to transform the country from being "labor-rich to talent-intensive."Zhang Lihua, professor with the Labor and Human Resources School at the Beijing-based Renmin University of China, said, "The non state-owned economic institutions and new social organizations are playing a more important role in China's economic and social development.""It's becoming more important for talents in these sectors to compete equally with others in the public sector," she said.At present, more than 70 percent of China's companies are privately-owned and generate more than 60 percent of the country's GDP.China has more than 400,000 "new social organizations," including social groups, foundations, and other non-profit and non-governmental organizations, according to figures from the Ministry of Civil Affairs.There are still many obstacles to personnel movement in government departments, government-sponsored institutions, state-owned enterprises and private companies in China.For example, a person who works in a private company cannot usually land a job easily in a government department or a state-owned company."This is why many college graduates prefer to work for government departments and state-owned companies right after their graduation," Zhang said."If the new policies of equal treatment are carried out, they can remove the obstacles, help with the free flow and allocation of resources and high-calibre talents," she said."It will support economic development in the private sector and promote technological innovation and the diffusion of knowledge."Xiao Mingzheng, director of the Human Resource Development and Management Research Center at Peking University, said, "Demand for talents has increased greatly as China witnesses a boom in non-public economic and social organizations.""To create a more open and equal environment for personnel employment, the policies will certainly help the non-public sector attract and train various kinds of talents," he said.