Spring farming has begun across most of China, with wider use of high-tech equipment, such as drones, sensors and other smart tools, to improve grain production and bolster food security.
In the Huang-Huai-Hai region, a major wheat belt in China, winter wheat has entered the jointing and heading stage. Authorities said crop growth has largely caught up with seasonal norms as key technical measures are applied in the fields.
The eastern province of Anhui has stepped up use of intelligent machinery this year.
In Mengcheng County, radar-equipped drones worked with smart field sensors to deliver precision fertilization. Local authorities said that farming drones with 360-degree sensing capability have boosted efficiency by more than 20 percent.
So far, early rice seedling cultivation is nearly complete in China, with more than 30 percent of planting finished, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs said.
Corn and potato sowing is advancing in an orderly manner, said the ministry.
The ministry added that supplies of farm inputs remain adequate, and overall progress in spring planting and crop management has been smooth.
Nationwide spring planting underway with smart tools
A Japanese physician and clinic director has warned that escalating tensions in the Middle East are already causing shortages of critical medical consumable supplies in Japan, and that a prolonged conflict could lead to preventable deaths and a serious decline in medical care quality. According to the latest data released by Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI), more than 40 percent of the naphtha used in Japan relies on imports from the Middle East. Even domestically produced naphtha depends heavily on crude oil imported from the region. Naphtha, a product derived from crude oil, is a key raw material for dialysis supplies, medical gloves, syringes, and other medical goods.
"First, there have been shortages to varying degrees of syringes, needles, and rubber gloves. In addition, various testing consumables have also become generally difficult to procure. It can be said that panic buying-like situations have already emerged, and the prices of some supplies have even increased by about 50 percent," said Tomonari Watanabe, director of Shibuya Naika Clinic in Tokyo.
Ongoing tensions in the Middle East are also slowing the delivery of medical supplies. Japan has more than 100,000 primary care clinics, which play a vital supporting role in the country's overall medical system.
The doctor warned that if pressure on the production and delivery of medical supplies is not eased, it will seriously affect Japan's overall medical environment and quality of care.
"Items that used to arrive the day after placing an order may now take one to two weeks. Supplies that could previously be ordered without quantity limits are now rationed to just one or two sets per month, requiring distribution control. Some items are no longer available in pharmacies, such as antibiotics for example. If the war becomes protracted, it will inevitably affect logistics. Specifically, for petroleum-based products such as plastics, once their prices continue to rise, we could face an extreme situation where lives that could have been saved are not saved. Therefore, I am concerned that the medical care quality will decline," he said.
Middle East tensions disrupts Japan's medical consumable supplies