Wolfberry farmers in China were caught smoking their crops with industrial sulfur to preserve them. Chinese state media also aired clips of workers washing the berries in thick, foaming chemicals.
STORY: Selling his produce along a street in Jinan in eastern China, 56-year-old farmer Li Weidong says the city is as hot as a stove. The capital of Shandong province has been struggling with ...
Rodney Egger harvests soybeans with a combine on Oct. 22 south of Lincoln, Neb. A promise by Chinese farmers to buy at least 25 million metric tons of soybeans annually for next three years will bring ...
United States farmers may need to plan now for a future in which Chinese-made drones are no longer allowed to operate on U.S. networks. That future may be nearer than many think, but it doesn’t mean ...
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