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Rice-producing provinces take measures to ensure water supply during drought

China

China

China

Rice-producing provinces take measures to ensure water supply during drought

2025-08-03 17:33 Last Updated At:18:17

Central China's rice-producing provinces are sparing no effort to ensure water supplies, striving to maintain agricultural productivity and support regional food security.

Due to the persistent heat and lack of rainfall, about 43,300 hectares of rice in Xiangyang City, Hubei Province, are in drought conditions. Some field ridges are cracking, and soil moisture levels are dropping.

In Qiangang Village, about 130 hectares are dedicated to rice cultivation. To tackle the drought, the village is using 22 wells that take turns pumping water 24 hours a day to keep the soil moist.

"Over the past few days, the ongoing pumping has finally filled the fields with water. We're relieved now, and don't have to worry about the rice yield anymore," said Lyu Yuanxin, a farmer.

Various departments in Xiangyang City are working together to address the drought. Agricultural experts are developing tailored irrigation plans, and the power department is making sure water pumps have a steady electricity supply. The meteorological team is issuing more alerts to fully safeguard the bottom line of soil moisture, all aimed at ensuring a good harvest in northern Hubei's grain-producing areas.

Meanwhile, Gushi County in Henan Province is facing drought after over 20 days of high temperatures and sunshine.

As a key rice-producing area, local authorities are ensuring water supply for 120,000 hectares of rice during the critical growth stages by drawing water from irrigation sources and drilling wells.

"Next, we will keep using targeted irrigation methods based on the drought's condition to deliver water to the driest areas," said Gao Zhongfeng, a local official.

Currently, Gushi County has formed a drought relief team to help manage the construction of new pumping stations and wells in the northern four towns, making every effort to ensure food security and agricultural production.

Rice-producing provinces take measures to ensure water supply during drought

Rice-producing provinces take measures to ensure water supply during drought

The multilateral system is "under attack" amid global turmoil, President of the 80th UN General Assembly Annalena Baerbock warned in her remarks on Wednesday.

In her briefing on the priorities for the resumed 80th Session of the General Assembly, the UNGA president noted that the current multilateral system does not collapse all in a sudden, but "crumbles piece by piece" in divisions, compromises, and lack of political commitment.

The president called all the UN member states to defend the UN Charter and international law and promote cross-regional cooperation.

She also urged to push forward the work of the UNGA on certain critical issues with a strong majority, rather than an absolute consensus among all member states. Such act is not a failure of multilateralism, but "an affirmation of it," she said.

The foundational principles of the institution should not be eroded by appeasement, she said, calling the member states to show courage, leadership, and responsibility at the UN's "critical make-or-break moment."

"The UN needs you. Your support, your leadership, your principle, stand, your cross-regional cooperation, if we are to preserve and modernize this institution, if we are to make it, rather than break it," she said.

UNGA President warns global multilateral system "under attack"

UNGA President warns global multilateral system "under attack"

UNGA President warns global multilateral system "under attack"

UNGA President warns global multilateral system "under attack"

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