Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Technology is transforming agriculture in every field in China

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Summer Sowing Gets a Tech Boost in Ningjin County

When the planting season starts in Ningjin, a county in Dezhou, Shandong, the fields buzz with activity. But behind the familiar rhythm of sowing and harvesting lies a quiet revolution that is reshaping how water, fertilizer, and crops are managed.

Water No Longer a Source of Conflict

For years, farmers like Ye Jitao, director of a local agricultural cooperative, faced a daily scramble for water.

The Old Way

  • Several households shared a single well.
  • Waiting three or four days for one irrigation round was common.
  • Electricity costs for pumping water added up quickly.

The New Pipeline

The government built a pipeline network that pulls water straight from the Yellow River to the fields. With a simple switch, water flows whenever needed—no more waiting, no more fights over a limited supply.

Using Water Wisely

Having enough water is only half the battle; using it efficiently is just as important.

Smart Irrigation at the Yicang Planting Cooperative

Farmer Wang Yuchi now checks soil moisture and water use on his smartphone.

  • Real‑time data tells him exactly when and how much to water.
  • He no longer has to stand in the field for hours, fearing waste.
  • Traditional flood irrigation has been replaced by drip systems and integrated water‑fertilizer management, delivering resources precisely where they’re needed.

Turning Salty Wasteland into Productive Fields

Similar tech‑driven changes are happening across Shandong.

Reviving Land in Wuzhuang Village

Four years ago, this area suffered from severe salinity—about 16 parts per thousand—making almost nothing grow.

The Closed Two‑Layer Subsurface Drainage System
  1. Vertical plastic barriers stop salty water from seeping in.
  2. Two underground pipes work together:
    1. The top layer flushes salt out of the soil.
    2. The bottom layer blocks salty groundwater from rising.

After one treatment, salinity dropped to 3 parts per thousand within a year or two, pH returned to neutral, and corn yields rose to 600 kg per mu—turning barren land into a thriving farm.

Drones, Robots, and Data: Everyday Farming Gets Smarter

Crop‑Protection Drones in Linshu County

Farmers like Yu Leyi now rely on drones that fly low over wheat seedlings, spraying water and nutrients evenly.

  • Real‑time temperature, humidity, and crop conditions are visible on a phone.
  • Precision management cuts guesswork and boosts efficiency.

Smart Monitoring Stations

Linshu has installed 200 field stations that track soil moisture, temperature, humidity, wind, and more.

  • Data feeds into a Smart Agricultural Big Data platform.
  • Farmers get exact recommendations for irrigation and fertilization.
  • Operators like Wan Lei can monitor drone flights and soil data from a tablet, making a single drone cover 53‑67 hectares a day.

Robot Sprayers in Wali Village

Technician Wang Xinwen controls a pesticide‑spraying robot with a tablet.

  • The robot follows a set route autonomously.
  • It shows soil moisture, leaf insect damage, and lets the user adjust the spray angle.
  • Powered by BeiDou satellite navigation, it achieves 95 % spraying accuracy and cuts chemical use by 40 %.
  • One robot can treat over 13 hectares per day—ten times faster than a skilled worker.
  • Renting the robot can lower operating costs by 60 % and labor costs by 40 %.

Why This Matters for Teens and the Future

The shift from labor‑intensive, water‑wasting farming to precision, tech‑enabled agriculture shows how innovation can solve real‑world problems:

  • Conserves precious water resources.
  • Reduces reliance on chemicals, protecting the environment.
  • Increases yields and farmer incomes.
  • Creates new tech‑savvy jobs in rural areas.

For students interested in science, engineering, or environmental studies, these developments offer a glimpse of how technology can revitalize traditional industries and sustain food production for generations to come.

Conclusion

Ningjin County’s transformation—from waiting days for a single well to tapping into a Yellow River pipeline, from guess‑work irrigation to smartphone‑controlled drip systems, from salty wastelands to fertile fields thanks to smart drainage, and from manual spraying to drone and robot precision—illustrates a broader trend across Shandong. Technology is not just adding gadgets to farms; it is reshaping the very way farmers interact with the land, making agriculture more efficient, sustainable, and ready for the future.

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