Yahoo – AFP,
Justine Gerardy, 14 Sep 2014
A worker is
seen in a rice field at a farm that uses organic methods, in the
New
Territories in Hong Kong, on August 6, 2014 (AFP Photo/Alex Ogle)
|
It's a
rural tradition that faded out decades ago as Hong Kong turned into a neon-lit
megacity: rice seedlings being dropped into watery paddy fields with gentle
plops.
But now a
new wave of farmers are growing the staple again in sleepy Long Valley in the
city's northern New Territories, where buzzing insects and flocking birds offer
a rich contrast to the high rise blocks in the distance.
Former
supermarket supervisor Kan Wai-hong went from working late shifts to harvesting
sacks of fragrant, golden rice.
Farmer
Thomas Fung checks his bitter
melons, being grown on his farm that uses
organic methods, in Hong Kong, on
August 6, 2014 (AFP Photo/Alex Ogle)
|
The
naturally-farmed rice paddies started reappearing in Long Valley seven years
ago after a 40-odd year absence.
Started as
part of a bird-friendly wetland conservation project, five farmers now produce
around three tons of rice a year near the border with Hong Kong's biggest food
supplier mainland China.
It's a mere
drop in the 833 tons of rice that Hong Kong goes through every day, but it
fetches several times the price of mass-produced imports as part of a growing
demand for naturally grown food.
A
relentless run of food scandals across the border -- from rotten meat in
fast-food to dead pigs floating in rivers, recycled "gutter oil", and
heavy pesticide use -- has made people rethink the way they shop.
"When
food safety in mainland China or even other places is not that good, then Hong
Kong people will choose foods that are safer," said Kan.
"The
trend of society has changed, people have become more affluent and they care
more about food safety -- so more people have come into contact with these products,"
he said of the more expensive organic fare.
One of the
world's most densely populated places, the former British colony imports nearly
all of its food with just two percent of its vegetables locally grown.
But the
number of organic-style vegetable farms has increased from a handful of
trailblazers in the 1990s to several hundred today -- of which 130 are
certified as fully organic.
'We're
scared'
While still
flown in to the semi-autonomous southern Chinese city, homegrown organic
vegetables now make up 12 percent of the 45 tons of vegetables the city
produces daily.
Shoppers
are shrugging off the fact that they cost more than their mass produced
counterparts.
"After
learning that there are quite a lot of different kinds of pesticides or
different ways of growing the plants, I think it's better to have the organic
ones," Jenny Ho told AFP while browsing one of several weekly organic
markets.
"(The
food) from Hong Kong does not have to travel so long and is more fresh and
delicious as a result."
A vendor
arranges vegetables at an organic market in Hong Kong, on
August 6, 2014 (AFP
Photo/Alex Ogle)
|
Despite the
shock of a 2008 melamine-laced baby formula scandal that killed six infants,
China's scares have continued to flare.
Sixteen
percent of the country's land area was estimated to be polluted, according to
China's environment ministry in April, with almost one fifth of farmland
tainted by inorganic elements such as cadmium.
Among the
latest alarms to fuel distrust are chicken feet soaked in hydrogen peroxide and
a cook who painted dishes with a banned pigment to look more appealing.
Last year,
Hong Kong authorities tested around 65,000 food samples and found only 57 from
various countries to be unsatisfactory.
Best
practice supply farms are also identified on the mainland, and last month new
rules on pesticide residues came into effect.
But
apprehension remains. "The government is doing quite a good job in Hong
Kong," said Jonathan Wong, director of the Hong Kong Organic Resource
Centre. "We're scared, but we have a better control system now."
"Food
supply in Hong Kong is still safe but we worry," Wong added, blaming the
regular mainland scandals. "This psychologically makes people in Hong Kong
feel worried about the food supply from China."
High
demand
By 1980, 40
percent of farmland in Hong Kong was reported as abandoned and rice paddies
made up less than one percent of what was in use. Today, a total of just seven
square kilometres (2.7 square miles) is actively farmed.
Packs of organically
grown rice, pictured
in Hong Kong, on August 6, 2014 (AFP
Photo/Alex Ogle)
|
But
shrinking farmland, also eyed by property developers, is often limited to small
plots on short-term leases in the space-challenged city, which is also home to
rooftop vegetable gardens and vertical fish farms.
Farmer
Thomas Fung lives in Hong Kong's skyscraper sprawl and commutes to his New
Territories patchwork of plots rented from six different landlords on leases
ranging from two to five years.
It means
even more pressure for the farmers, but those prepared to go organic to meet
the city's changing tastes acknowledge that the fears play to their favour.
"The
people are quite afraid of the quality of mainland China veggies, so the demand
is very, very big in Hong Kong," said Fung, one of the city's self-claimed
organic farmers.
Wong
Yu-wing, whose nearby family farm is one of the largest to be fully certified,
agreed.
"Organic
planting is much more better than the traditional method because Hong Kong
people are looking for organic vegetables -- fresh, planted in Hong Kong -- so
we have a big market."
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