China has unveiled an ambitious five-year plan, stretching from 2026 to 2030, that targets the modernization of its agriculture and rural areas. The initiative, released by the State Council, underscores the country’s commitment to bolstering food security, enhancing agricultural productivity, and uplifting living standards in rural communities. The overarching aim is to align these efforts with broader modernization goals, ensuring that by 2030, the nation not only secures its food supplies but also elevates the quality and competitiveness of its agricultural sector while solidifying its achievements in poverty reduction.
Central to the plan is the goal of increasing China’s grain production capacity to approximately 725 million tonnes by the end of the decade. It also sets out to maintain a stringent quality control measure, ensuring that the pass rate for routine agricultural product quality and safety inspections stays at or above 98 percent. Further targets include expanding meat production, advancing green agricultural practices, improving rural sewage treatment, and fostering technological innovation that will drive income growth for farmers. This comprehensive strategy places significant emphasis on enhancing the quality and efficiency of agricultural output to meet the rising consumer demand for healthier and higher-quality food products.
The plan is poised to transform agriculture into a more advanced and sustainable industry, fostering balanced growth between urban and rural areas. It highlights the importance of strengthening agricultural science and technology, encouraging modern farming techniques, and boosting farmer incomes. Key initiatives under this plan involve expanding high-standard farmland, enhancing agricultural research and innovation, developing cold-chain logistics infrastructure, and integrating artificial intelligence into agricultural practices. Additionally, the modernization of agricultural product processing and the promotion of environmentally sustainable farming are also prioritized.
To support these objectives, China will invest in emerging sectors such as intelligent breeding technologies, new-energy agricultural machinery, low-altitude agricultural applications, and agricultural bio-manufacturing. Innovative food production methods are also on the agenda. The new targets build upon recent successes, with the nation’s grain output reaching nearly 715 million tonnes in 2025, marking a sustained production level above 700 million tonnes for two consecutive years. The role of agricultural technology has been pivotal, contributing over 64 percent to the sector’s development, with ambitions to increase this figure to 67 percent by 2030.
