"/>

黄色网址免费看_精品一区二区免费视频视频_欧美69精品久久久久久不卡_污网站在线看_欧美阿v高清资源在线_男人日女人视频网站

Feature: To ensure safe, sufficient farm produce supply for world's growing population

Source: Xinhua    2018-07-02 07:08:28

by Xu Jing, Zhou Zhou, Miao Zhuang

CHICAGO, July 1 (Xinhua) -- Ian Jepson has worked for Syngenta for 29 years. As head of plant performance biology at Syngenta Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, he aims to develop crops that produce more yields in a sustainable way.

"The world's population increases 100,000 people every single day. We need to be able to feed those people in a sustainable way," he told Xinhua in an interview.

INCREASE CROP YIELD

Agricultural production in the world faces many challenges nowadays: insects, crop diseases and viruses. All these pose a big threat to the output of agricultural products.

"We have a number of projects using GMO (genetically modified organism) and non-GMO techniques to do that (increase crop yield)," Jepson said. By technology-rich aid technology, Jepson and his team are transferring insect resistance genes into the crops to stop the insects damaging the crop, then losing yield.

Jepson is also studying the impact of drought, heat and cold on crops.

Syngenta has an innovation center located in the Research Triangle Park in the U.S. state of North Carolina for Jepson and his team to do all these researches. The crop greenhouse facility here has many small chambers, with each chamber being controlled independently of the other in terms of temperature, humidity, and CO2, and underneath each room in the basement there are very advanced set of equipment for air conditioning, and humidity control, CO2 control.

"It's like an arms race. Biology will always adapt," Jepson said. When the first wave of technology was introduced, it protected the crops from certain insects and diseases. Then the insects and diseases evolve, and eat crops again after a number of years. Then new technology needs to be introduced.

"So we need to always bring in new technologies," Jepson stressed. "You need a combination of technologies, including new technologies like genome editing, biologicals," as a supplement to chemical control and traditional breeding.

"The evolution of modern farming technology and responsible, science-based environmental management is imperative if we are to sustainably produce affordable, safe and local food to feed more than 9 billion people by 2050 and take care of our planet," Jepson reiterated.

Before becoming product safety head of Syngenta, Hope Hart has been involved in insect control research in the company for 10 years. "We use (GM) technology to help farmers produce more food, increase their yield. We also help farmers decrease their inputs, like water input and chemical input. So it gives farmers economic advantages as well."

Statistics show that in early 1930s, 7,000 corn plants per acre were grown in the United States, yielding about 27 bushels per acre. Today, 35,000 plants and 150 bushels per acre are common, thanks to modern equipment and GM technologies.

ENVIRONMENT FRIDENDLY

About 70 percent of the world's water is used by agriculture, and there is only a small amount available for expansion.

Statistics provided by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) show that in 1950, one hectare of farmland only need to feed two people. By 2030, the number of people one hectare of farmland need to feed will increase to five people. This requires a better use of existing farmland.

One way to better use existing farmland is to make crops more sustainable and environmentally friendly.

Jepson's team has worked on a big crop program for drought tolerance. They also have a GM program developing GM leads, and crops engineered with the GM leads they developed would use less water. Furthermore, they are using genome editing technology to produce corn varieties that use 15 percent less water.

In addition, Jepson is using advanced molecular marker, a non-GM technology, to develop corn that can grow under moderate drought stress conditions and produces 25 percent more yield.

Controlling use of chemicals, say herbicides, insecticides, for the benefit of environment is another advantage GM technology development gives.

Many old technologies on the market from several decades ago are characteristic of high use rate of chemicals and have potential environmental impacts. "Our ambition is to replace those with modern, safer chemistry," said Jepson.

Traditionally, one hectare of farmland may need two kilograms of chemicals. With new technologies, spoonful chemical application may be enough, Jepson said. "One application may control for the season."

Of her 22-year career in Syngenta, Hart has been in product safety research for 12 years. She holds that GM crops have two advantages: allowing farmers to spray less pesticide; and saving farmers from excessive tilling. "No tilling has huge benefits for the ground, from temperature control to erosion, soil erosion, water runoff from the soil."

Thanks to introduction of modern farming technologies, the yield of cotton, soybeans, corn and wheat worldwide has increased by 43 percent, 55 percent, 64 percent and 25 percent, respectively, from 1980 to 2011.

In the same period, soil loss caused by cotton, soybean, corn and wheat growing dropped by 68 percent, 66 percent, 67 percent and 47 percent, respectively; irrigation water use dropped by 75 percent, 42 percent, 53 percent and 12 percent; energy use dropped by 31 percent, 48 percent, 44 percent and 12 percent; and carbon emission dropped by 22 percent, 49 percent, 36 percent and two percent.

FOOD SECURITY

Entering the main gate of Syngenta Innovation Center located in the Research Triangle Park in the U.S. state of North Carolina one can see an oil painting portrait of Mary-Dell Chilton, the Mother of Genetic Engineering, right in front.

In 1977, Chilton documented how a bacterium transferred some of its DNA into a tobacco leaf, triggering the growth of a crown gall. By discovering the mechanism Chilton launched GM.

Since GM technology was first put on market in 1996, an estimated 186 million hectares of GM food crops have been grown worldwide; and over three trillion GM food meals have been served and eaten by humans.

Despite the fact that GM foods are widely consumed, the concern about GM foods has never disappeared.

Hart explained her work to Xinhua. GM crops usually take 10 to 13 years from idea to market. "About half of that time is product safety studies," Hart said. "We conduct anywhere from 80 to 100 studies on every one of our GM crops before they go out onto market."

"We also test the plant to make sure it still is nutritious as it was when it started out," Hart added.

Hart compares human's digestion of GM foods to a broken camera, saying if a camera is broken into pieces, one piece cannot be a functioning camera.

"The same thing is true for a gene," said Hart. "When we eat DNA, it gets broken down into individual pieces and then our body absorbs those individual pieces."

"I had cheese toast this morning. I ate a lot of wheat DNA with my bread and cow DNA with my cheese, and I am not turning into a wheat plant or cow right now. I am not making wheat proteins. There is nothing incorporated into my DNA that will actually pass onto the next generation," Hart said.

Nevertheless, Hart does not oppose other types of farming. "Sometimes farmers may need to be more conventional than GM, or they are in a situation where the genetics work better for them and they use a GM approach instead," Hart added. "I believe in pulling all these different technologies together."

CHINA TIES

In June 2017, ChemChina, a state-owned enterprise with full name as China National Chemical Corporation, purchased Syngenta, for 43 billion U.S. dollars, the largest transaction ever clinched by a Chinese company overseas.

Given China's huge population and reliance on agriculture, the marriage between ChemChina and Syngenta is good news for them both.

Before the tie was knotted, ChemChina and Syngenta have already forged a strong relationship for decades. They had worked closely on a potato project in Dingxi in China's northwestern Gansu Province, where they brought technology, products and advice to farmers there and increased the yields by more than 30 percent.

Before being purchased, Syngenta has already established multiple innovation and R&D centers in China, has five wholly-owned enterprises, several joint ventures and a number of representative offices, and has employed around 2,000 workers there.

China is very active as well as advanced in modern agricultural technology research, and has many gifted agricultural talents, said Shi Liang, head of Trait Technologies at Syngenta. Through its innovation centers in China, "Syngenta is supporting its global agricultural research to feed the global agricultural pipeline; to attract Chinese agricultural talents; and to support China's agriculture."

In the past 10 years, Syngenta has established collaboration with 26 institutes and universities in China, and supported more than 28 Chinese students with Syngenta Mary-Dell Chilton Graduate Scholarship.

"I think Syngenta can play a good role in supporting China's agriculture, from the research development to the production... and ChemChina's purchase of Syngenta has elevated it (the role)," Shi told Xinhua. "We can actually work together for some big China initiatives, which would not be possible in the past for a foreign company."

"Chinese agricultural companies and the academia always want to find a partner. They have done good front-end research. They just don't have a good way to move things to the pipeline and now it is a very good opportunity," Shi said.

Excited about the agricultural prospects the marriage may bring to China in the future, Shi said: "let's do something together and we can get something pass to the downstream."

Editor: ZX
Related News
Xinhuanet

Feature: To ensure safe, sufficient farm produce supply for world's growing population

Source: Xinhua 2018-07-02 07:08:28

by Xu Jing, Zhou Zhou, Miao Zhuang

CHICAGO, July 1 (Xinhua) -- Ian Jepson has worked for Syngenta for 29 years. As head of plant performance biology at Syngenta Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, he aims to develop crops that produce more yields in a sustainable way.

"The world's population increases 100,000 people every single day. We need to be able to feed those people in a sustainable way," he told Xinhua in an interview.

INCREASE CROP YIELD

Agricultural production in the world faces many challenges nowadays: insects, crop diseases and viruses. All these pose a big threat to the output of agricultural products.

"We have a number of projects using GMO (genetically modified organism) and non-GMO techniques to do that (increase crop yield)," Jepson said. By technology-rich aid technology, Jepson and his team are transferring insect resistance genes into the crops to stop the insects damaging the crop, then losing yield.

Jepson is also studying the impact of drought, heat and cold on crops.

Syngenta has an innovation center located in the Research Triangle Park in the U.S. state of North Carolina for Jepson and his team to do all these researches. The crop greenhouse facility here has many small chambers, with each chamber being controlled independently of the other in terms of temperature, humidity, and CO2, and underneath each room in the basement there are very advanced set of equipment for air conditioning, and humidity control, CO2 control.

"It's like an arms race. Biology will always adapt," Jepson said. When the first wave of technology was introduced, it protected the crops from certain insects and diseases. Then the insects and diseases evolve, and eat crops again after a number of years. Then new technology needs to be introduced.

"So we need to always bring in new technologies," Jepson stressed. "You need a combination of technologies, including new technologies like genome editing, biologicals," as a supplement to chemical control and traditional breeding.

"The evolution of modern farming technology and responsible, science-based environmental management is imperative if we are to sustainably produce affordable, safe and local food to feed more than 9 billion people by 2050 and take care of our planet," Jepson reiterated.

Before becoming product safety head of Syngenta, Hope Hart has been involved in insect control research in the company for 10 years. "We use (GM) technology to help farmers produce more food, increase their yield. We also help farmers decrease their inputs, like water input and chemical input. So it gives farmers economic advantages as well."

Statistics show that in early 1930s, 7,000 corn plants per acre were grown in the United States, yielding about 27 bushels per acre. Today, 35,000 plants and 150 bushels per acre are common, thanks to modern equipment and GM technologies.

ENVIRONMENT FRIDENDLY

About 70 percent of the world's water is used by agriculture, and there is only a small amount available for expansion.

Statistics provided by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) show that in 1950, one hectare of farmland only need to feed two people. By 2030, the number of people one hectare of farmland need to feed will increase to five people. This requires a better use of existing farmland.

One way to better use existing farmland is to make crops more sustainable and environmentally friendly.

Jepson's team has worked on a big crop program for drought tolerance. They also have a GM program developing GM leads, and crops engineered with the GM leads they developed would use less water. Furthermore, they are using genome editing technology to produce corn varieties that use 15 percent less water.

In addition, Jepson is using advanced molecular marker, a non-GM technology, to develop corn that can grow under moderate drought stress conditions and produces 25 percent more yield.

Controlling use of chemicals, say herbicides, insecticides, for the benefit of environment is another advantage GM technology development gives.

Many old technologies on the market from several decades ago are characteristic of high use rate of chemicals and have potential environmental impacts. "Our ambition is to replace those with modern, safer chemistry," said Jepson.

Traditionally, one hectare of farmland may need two kilograms of chemicals. With new technologies, spoonful chemical application may be enough, Jepson said. "One application may control for the season."

Of her 22-year career in Syngenta, Hart has been in product safety research for 12 years. She holds that GM crops have two advantages: allowing farmers to spray less pesticide; and saving farmers from excessive tilling. "No tilling has huge benefits for the ground, from temperature control to erosion, soil erosion, water runoff from the soil."

Thanks to introduction of modern farming technologies, the yield of cotton, soybeans, corn and wheat worldwide has increased by 43 percent, 55 percent, 64 percent and 25 percent, respectively, from 1980 to 2011.

In the same period, soil loss caused by cotton, soybean, corn and wheat growing dropped by 68 percent, 66 percent, 67 percent and 47 percent, respectively; irrigation water use dropped by 75 percent, 42 percent, 53 percent and 12 percent; energy use dropped by 31 percent, 48 percent, 44 percent and 12 percent; and carbon emission dropped by 22 percent, 49 percent, 36 percent and two percent.

FOOD SECURITY

Entering the main gate of Syngenta Innovation Center located in the Research Triangle Park in the U.S. state of North Carolina one can see an oil painting portrait of Mary-Dell Chilton, the Mother of Genetic Engineering, right in front.

In 1977, Chilton documented how a bacterium transferred some of its DNA into a tobacco leaf, triggering the growth of a crown gall. By discovering the mechanism Chilton launched GM.

Since GM technology was first put on market in 1996, an estimated 186 million hectares of GM food crops have been grown worldwide; and over three trillion GM food meals have been served and eaten by humans.

Despite the fact that GM foods are widely consumed, the concern about GM foods has never disappeared.

Hart explained her work to Xinhua. GM crops usually take 10 to 13 years from idea to market. "About half of that time is product safety studies," Hart said. "We conduct anywhere from 80 to 100 studies on every one of our GM crops before they go out onto market."

"We also test the plant to make sure it still is nutritious as it was when it started out," Hart added.

Hart compares human's digestion of GM foods to a broken camera, saying if a camera is broken into pieces, one piece cannot be a functioning camera.

"The same thing is true for a gene," said Hart. "When we eat DNA, it gets broken down into individual pieces and then our body absorbs those individual pieces."

"I had cheese toast this morning. I ate a lot of wheat DNA with my bread and cow DNA with my cheese, and I am not turning into a wheat plant or cow right now. I am not making wheat proteins. There is nothing incorporated into my DNA that will actually pass onto the next generation," Hart said.

Nevertheless, Hart does not oppose other types of farming. "Sometimes farmers may need to be more conventional than GM, or they are in a situation where the genetics work better for them and they use a GM approach instead," Hart added. "I believe in pulling all these different technologies together."

CHINA TIES

In June 2017, ChemChina, a state-owned enterprise with full name as China National Chemical Corporation, purchased Syngenta, for 43 billion U.S. dollars, the largest transaction ever clinched by a Chinese company overseas.

Given China's huge population and reliance on agriculture, the marriage between ChemChina and Syngenta is good news for them both.

Before the tie was knotted, ChemChina and Syngenta have already forged a strong relationship for decades. They had worked closely on a potato project in Dingxi in China's northwestern Gansu Province, where they brought technology, products and advice to farmers there and increased the yields by more than 30 percent.

Before being purchased, Syngenta has already established multiple innovation and R&D centers in China, has five wholly-owned enterprises, several joint ventures and a number of representative offices, and has employed around 2,000 workers there.

China is very active as well as advanced in modern agricultural technology research, and has many gifted agricultural talents, said Shi Liang, head of Trait Technologies at Syngenta. Through its innovation centers in China, "Syngenta is supporting its global agricultural research to feed the global agricultural pipeline; to attract Chinese agricultural talents; and to support China's agriculture."

In the past 10 years, Syngenta has established collaboration with 26 institutes and universities in China, and supported more than 28 Chinese students with Syngenta Mary-Dell Chilton Graduate Scholarship.

"I think Syngenta can play a good role in supporting China's agriculture, from the research development to the production... and ChemChina's purchase of Syngenta has elevated it (the role)," Shi told Xinhua. "We can actually work together for some big China initiatives, which would not be possible in the past for a foreign company."

"Chinese agricultural companies and the academia always want to find a partner. They have done good front-end research. They just don't have a good way to move things to the pipeline and now it is a very good opportunity," Shi said.

Excited about the agricultural prospects the marriage may bring to China in the future, Shi said: "let's do something together and we can get something pass to the downstream."

[Editor: huaxia]
010020070750000000000000011100001372942761
主站蜘蛛池模板: 成人免费高清|精品色呦呦|国产另类ts人妖一区二区|99热精品在线|国产人免费人成免费视频|欧美国产日韩二区 | WWW免费视频在线观看播放|欧美日本一道本一区二区|999在线精品视频|国产十日韩十欧美|天堂网中文字幕在线观看|日韩一二三四 | 亚洲一级毛片免费观看|欧美韩日一区|WWW内射国产在线观看|奇米精品一区二区三区在线观看|99久久亚洲|国产成人精品亚洲线观看 | 中国黄色影院|99精品一区二区三区|久久成人久久|疯狂做受XXXX高潮吃奶|欧洲精品二区|激情超碰在线 | 51久久夜色精品国产水果派解说|国产欧美日韩视频免费|国产96在线亚洲|人妻无码中文字幕免费视频蜜桃|成人=a片产无码免费视频奶头鸭度|亚洲已满18点击进入在线看片 | 欧美一区激情|久久久久久久91|免费看日本黄色|一区二区精品视频日本|秋霞一区二区|国产精品无码一区二区=aⅤ污美国 | 午夜老司机免费视频|久久久国产精品免费=a片|奇米影视7777|八戒理论片午影院无码爱恋|国产91视频免费看|国产精品久久久久久久不卡 | 男同免费|久久久久久草莓香蕉步兵|亚洲女女女同性VIDEO|免费的=av不用播放器的|黄频网站在线观看|久久久88 | 青青草青青操|www.jjzz日本|最近中文字幕完整视频高清|91影院在线观看视频|国产精品水嫩水嫩|男女夜色爽爽影院 | 伊人网视频在线|久久免费看少妇=a高潮一片黄特|99国产精品自在自在久久|久久国产最新|一级片网址|无码天堂亚洲国产=aV久久 | 精品国产免费久久久久久桃子图片|六月婷婷久久|黄色在线观看免费视频|丰满熟妇XXXX性PPX人交|国内自拍网址|97色干 | 国产人妖在线|国产午夜福利在线播放|亚洲国产成人精品久久久国产成人|高柳の肉嫁动漫在线播放|日韩久久精品一区二区三区|精品偷自拍另类在线观看 | 国产成人精品777|久久久久国内精品|国产乱妇无乱码大黄=a=a片|久久字幕网|一区二区三区无码高清视频|在线视频综合 | 日韩精品无码一本二本三本|亚洲丶国产丶欧美一区二区三区|色在线影院|一级做=a爱片性色毛片|精品国产一区=aV天美传媒|www.日韩视频 | 大地在线视频免费观看高清视频大全|蜜桃色=av|大陆毛片|青青久操视频|国产精品伊人久久|久久国产综合 | 亚洲精品久久久久久蜜臀|老熟妇性老熟妇性色|黄色一级片片|国产二区一区|极品少妇xxxxx|日日摸夜夜爽无码毛片精选 | 国产精品九九九九九九九|我征服了仪态端庄的物理老师|最新中文字幕在线|久久成人啪啪性教育|#NAME?|欧美大香线蕉线伊人久久 | 岛国片在线播放97|欧美成人精品一级在线观看|久久99精品久久久久久久|一区二区三区影院|国产=a久|成人一区久久 | 国产黑人在线|日韩免费在线观看|99视频这里只有|麻豆国产一区|亚洲GV天堂无码男同在线观看|亚洲=aV中文无码字幕色三 | 亚洲精品无码成人=a片|国产美女口爆吞精普通话|国产精品国产三级国产专播i12|91精品国产一区自在线拍|日韩特级|成人在线免费观看小视频 | 天天射夜夜骑|日韩视频黄色|亚洲国产精品一区二区成人片国内|#NAME?|一二三区在线免费观看|国产九九在线视频 | 天天爽天天草|久久成人一区二区|国语对白露脸XXXXXX|黄色片视频在线免费观看|川上优在线|中国黄色免费 | 欧美激情乱人伦|操综合网|在线中文字幕=av|熟女高潮视频|www.夜色321.com|国产一级淫片免费放大片 | #NAME?|青青草在线视频免费观看|久草免费福利|日日噜噜夜夜狠狠爱视频免费樱桃|国产精品一级=a级理论片在线观看|亚洲狠狠色综合蜜桃 | 国产精品视频不卡|中文幕无线码中文字夫妻|免费人成再在线观看视频|处女影院|一区二区三区视频在线|99热精国产这里只有精品 | 国产无码免费视频|色天使色妺姝在线视频|国产一级黄|777婷婷|成在线人=av免费无码高潮喷水|无码精品久久久久久人妻中字 | 亚洲另类在线视频|6精品国产乱码久久久久久|欧美黄色=av|日本高清视频网址|草草网站影院白丝内射|成人免费=a级毛片无码片 HD性丰满白嫩白嫩少妇=aV|免费成人黄色大片|久久精品中文字幕|久久无码国产专区精品|欧美=a∨|91精品一久久香蕉国产线看观看软件 | 日韩=av在线中文|三年片在线观看大全中国|日韩视频在线观看中文字幕|91在线看免费|免费人成在线观看视频无码|一个人看的视频www在线观看 | 四虎影视8848dd|国产99久久久国产精品|综合视频在线观看|人成在线|国产偷国产偷亚洲高清人白洁|法国一级毛片 | 午夜特片|中文久久久久|亚洲精品美女色诱在线播放|大地资源在线观看视频在线|99久久婷婷国产综合精品免费|豪放女大兵免费观看bd www欧美精品|成全在线观看免费高清动漫|富婆推油偷高潮叫嗷嗷叫|久久做受WWW|韩国羞羞|日韩亚洲欧美中文三级 | 国产精品卡1卡2卡3|色八网站首页|潜行者40集免费观看视频|国产精品国产三级国产传播|小嫩妇下面好紧好爽视频|亚洲综合精品伊人久久 | 麻豆=aV一区二区三区|成人午夜看片|夜夜爽日日澡人人添蜜臀|性做久久久久久久久久|无遮挡又黄又刺激的视频|九一免费观看网站 | 国精产品999一区二区三区有限|日韩毛片|成人免费看片又大又黄|麻豆出品视频在线|4438全国成人免费|青草视频精品 | 亚洲精品毛片一区二区|在线理论片|精品久久久无码中文字幕边打电话|久久久久久久|亚洲中文字幕无码第一区|亚洲欧美偷自乱图片 | 日本最新免费二区|亚洲无人区一区二区三区|1769国内精品视频在线播放|色姑娘天天干|日本ssswww|国产vps毛片 | 国产免费一区二区三区在线能观看|久久综合9988久久爱|四虎影院久久|国产精品三区在线观看|日本一上一下爱爱免费|麻豆传媒视频 | 亚洲乱熟|中文综合在线观|国产精品一区二区在线观看|免费看成人=aV片|在线看=a视频|国产成人影院在线观看 | 国产一级=a特黄大片做受在线|亚洲精品屋V一区二区|亚洲午夜|亚洲综合爱爱|日本美女日b视频|日本国产=a | 国产精品原创视频|国产综合视频|1000部夫妻午夜免费|亚洲综合九九|色99日韩|成人久久18秘免费 | 国产白丝喷水娇喘视频|亚洲短视频在线观看|欧美全黄|久久夫妻视频|日韩高清无码免费|2020久久精品亚洲热综合一本 | 午夜dj福利|免费看黄在线观看|天堂=a在线|亚洲中文字幕人成影院|亚洲精品久久久久77777|天天躁夜夜踩很很踩2022 |