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Chinese agriculture drone makers see demand rise amid coronavirus outbreak
Chinese agriculture drone makers see demand rise amid coronavirus outbreak
By Wendy Ye
While the coronavirus outbreak in China has hit many
industries hard, some technology start-ups in agriculture are seeing demand
rise.
“In the first two
months of 2020, we delivered 4,000 units of our newly released agricultural
drones,” Justin Gong, co-founder of XAG, a major agricultural drone maker based
in the southern city of Guangzhou, said in Mandarin
XAG is not alone. In
the north, Beijing Yifei Technology’s Chief Marketing Officer Liu Zhuo said he
expects the company’s revenue to at least quadruple this year to over 30
million yuan ($4.31 million).
“Recently, we received increased inquiries about
agricultural drones and unmanned vehicles,” Liu said,
Large farms, local governments and agricultural products
distributors are buying high-tech equipment as the spread of the coronavirus
puts an impetus on reducing human contact. That’s a key challenge in putting
millions of Chinese back to work since most still labor by hand on small family
farms. Since emerging in late December, the highly contagious coronavirus has
killed more than 3,000 people in the country and infected tens of thousands
nationwide. The interest in agricultural
technology products and services also comes as the Chinese government has
stepped up its efforts to reduce reliance on food imports from the U.S. and
other countries over the last few years.
In fact, promoting agricultural modernization was written
into the 13th five-year plan of the Chinese economy, which reflects the central
government’s priorities and growth targets from 2015 to 2020. China’s
agriculture ministry estimated that more than 30,000 drones for targeted plant
protection will be deployed this spring. The Chinese market for
technology-driven smart agriculture products is expected to grow from
approximately $13.7 billion in 2015 to $26.8 billion this year, according to
Statista.
Prioritize getting back to work
More than half of China extended the Lunar New Year holiday
by more than a week in early February in an effort to limit the spread of the
coronavirus. The number of new cases outside the disease’s epicenter of Hubei
province has slowed dramatically in the last few weeks, but Chinese authorities
have been anxious to ensure farms are back up and running in time for the
spring planting season.
Beginning in early February, the national leading group for
fighting the virus has repeatedly named agriculture as a top priority. And on
Thursday, state media reported that the central government had distributed 140
million yuan ($20 million) in subsidies for machine and tools purchases.
The high level of support meant that agriculture-related
businesses like XAG were among the first batch of enterprises to resume work,
according to the company. The dronemaker also said it is taking advantage of
special policies such as rent reductions, and 100 million yuan in loans at an
interest rate more than three percentage points below the market level
With this kind of support, “agriculture might be the least
impacted industry by this outbreak,” said Gong Huaze, CEO of Mcfly, which is
backed by Baidu Ventures and develops technology for precision pesticide and
fungicide spraying. The start-up said it recently nailed a contract with the
Zhejiang provincial government, and expects more deals with Hubei, the center
of the virus’ outbreak.
“All of these measures are deployed to ensure that we won’t
miss the most critical farming season in China, which falls in April this
year,” Gong said.
In his view, part of the rush to support agricultural
production is related to trade tensions with the U.S.“China has enough grain
reserves to weather even a longer-than-expected virus outbreak,” Gong said,
“but any reduction in production would hurt China, a major food importer, in
its bargaining position with the U.S.” As part of a phase-one trade deal signed
in January, China agreed to buy at least $32 billion more in U.S. agricultural
products over the next two years. So far, neither country has publicly
indicated that the virus outbreak will significantly affect the ultimate
fulfillment of the agreement.
More consolidation, capital ahead Broader demographic trends
support greater use of technology in China’s farms in the long term. According
to official data, 300 million people hail from agrarian areas and are rapidly
aging, while many younger people have moved to cities, leaving farms with fewer
people to tend them. Chinese President Xi Jinping initiated a strategy of
“rural vitalization” in 2017 and it’s widely expected to be part of China’s
upcoming five-year plan. “Government policies in China serve as more than just
guidelines,” Qiu Shuang, a cross-border agriculture investor at Silicon
Valley-based Plug and Play Tech Center, said in Mandarin, according to a CNBC
translation. She pointed out that authorities often use investment funds backed
by the state to create incentives for innovation in certain industries. In her
view, “that explains why investment in agriculture is heating up now in China.”And
as the virus’ impact has hit many small businesses, including farmers, analysts
expect more consolidation ahead. That
will create the scale needed to drive larger purchases of farming equipment. However,
for so-called smart agricultural machinery, a major determining factor for its
growth is whether it can be included in a government subsidy list, Liu said.“Because
the new kind of agricultural equipment is more expensive,” he said, “only with
certain subsidies from the government, can it compete with traditional
agricultural equipment in the market.”
Source; CNBC
— CNBC’s Evelyn Cheng contributed to this story.
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