Central–local relations have long been a critical issue in China. A careful balance between the central and local governments is paramount to the country's continued development and stability.Footnote 1 As China goes global, research on its central and local relations is of growing importance to the international policy community.Footnote 2
Over the past decades, central–local relations have generated voluminous studies and intense debates among China watchers. In general, there are three schools of thought.Footnote 3 The first school of researchers contends that although it formally remains a unitary government, buttressed by top-down political control,Footnote 4 China has become one of the most decentralized states in the world due to decades of reform in the post-Mao era. This group of researchers stresses the importance of local autonomy, particularly over economic affairs, as high autonomy is considered to prompt local officials to pursue economic growth and take the initiative on institutional reform.Footnote 5 The aforementioned decentralized view is disputed by the second school of scholars who claim that decentralization in China only occurred when the centre wanted it to. From their perspective, local governments, provincial governments in particular, as agents of the central government, do not enjoy territorial autonomy but have only operational autonomy.Footnote 6 Nevertheless, the third school of scholars considers central–local relations as a tug of war, stressing that local governments consistently push the boundaries of legitimate local action.Footnote 7
As the theoretical debates continue, tremendous changes have been observed in the reconfiguration of central–local relations since 2012. Under Xi Jinping 习近平, the power balance between central and local governments has been tipped decisively in the centre's favour, and there has been a definite shift towards a more top-down (top-level) design (dingceng sheji 顶层设计).Footnote 8 Against the backdrop of shrinking local policy autonomy, Heilongjiang province's controversial genetically modified organism (GMO) ban in 2016 thus represents a puzzling case. With very limited arable land and water resources to feed its 1.4 billion population, applying yield-augmenting technologies, such as GM technology, has long been considered vital by top Chinese leaders, such as former premier Wen Jiabao 温家宝 and current president Xi Jinping, to safeguard the country's food security. Therefore, developing GM technology is a strategic decision made by the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the State Council,Footnote 9 and the central government has been determined to steadily achieve the commercialization of GMOs with Chinese seeds. However, surprisingly, in December 2016, Heilongjiang, the country's most important grain producer, introduced a provincial GMO ban.Footnote 10
This paper contributes to the debate on central–local relations through an in-depth case study of Heilongjiang's GMO ban by addressing two key questions. First, why did the Heilongjiang provincial government introduce the provincial GMO ban despite the central government's strong support of GMOs? Second, how has the Heilongjiang provincial government reduced its political risk? The remainder of this article proceeds as follows. Section two introduces the research method and data. Following that, section three presents a brief review of GMO development in China and discusses the nature of Heilongjiang's GMO ban, and section four discusses the contributing factors behind the ban. Section five then sheds light on how the Heilongjiang provincial government managed to reduce the political risk prompted by its defiance of the central GMO policy. A short conclusion is provided in section six.
Method and Data
This research adopted the case study method, and it analyses coverages of GMO issues by prominent party mouthpieces, central and local policy documents, and the statements of Chinese central and local officials. In addition, academic literature and industry reports from both Chinese and English sources have been collected as supplementary data. The primary data set was compiled by accessing China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI). Apart from CNKI, relevant central and local governments’ laws and regulations were extracted from the PKULaw database and government websites.
Central GMO Policy and Heilongjiang's GMO Ban
Chinese leaders have long considered GM technology an essential solution to the country's food security challenges. China is not only the first country that commercialized GMOs back in 1992 but also at the forefront of global GMO research and development.Footnote 11 For decades, top Chinese leaders and various central policy documents have shown strong support for GMOs (see Appendix A in supplementary material). For instance, in 2007, at the annual gathering of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Chinese Academy of Engineering, the then premier Wen Jiabao said, “To solve the food problem, we have to rely on big science and technology measures, rely on biotechnology, rely on GM technology.”Footnote 12 In February 2008, China's No. 1 Document (yihao wenjian 一号文件) initiated a major special scientific and technological project for breeding new GMO varieties. Later that year, in July, the State Council approved a US$3.5 billion investment in GMO development.Footnote 13 Following this, the importance of developing GMOs was further stressed during the Third Plenary Session of the 17th Central Committee and in the country's first ever Medium- and Long-Term Food Security Plan (2008–2020) in late 2008.Footnote 14 Then, in 2010, the State Council announced its plans to develop seven strategic emerging industries (SEIs). Biotechnology, including GM technology, was one of the seven SEIs.Footnote 15
However, with the outbreak of several major food safety scandals, and more importantly, the Golden Rice Scandal in 2012,Footnote 16 the concern among Chinese consumers about GMOs has dovetailed with broader worries about food safety.Footnote 17 Furthermore, reports of the widespread illegal plantation of GM crops, particularly the GM varieties developed by foreign companies such as Monsanto, have also led to worry about foreign control of China's GMO market. Amid mounting public resistance and growing fear of foreign control over GM technology, in a speech at the Central Rural Work Conference in December 2013, Chinese president Xi Jinping stated that China must “boldly research and innovate, [and] dominate the high points of GMO technology” while exercising appropriate caution.Footnote 18 Following this, in March 2014, Han Changfu 韩长赋, the then minister of agriculture and rural affairs, while responding to media questions regarding GMOs, stated:
To ensure food security and the effective supply of important agricultural products, the way out is that we must take the road of scientific and technological innovation. This also includes that we must occupy a place in GM technology and have our own independent intellectual property rights. GM technology cannot be monopolized by others, and the GMO market cannot be occupied by foreign countries.Footnote 19
In December 2014, the chief economist and press secretary of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs (MARA) outlined the roadmap for GMO commercialization in China.Footnote 20 To revert the public opinion of GMOs, China has not only launched a media campaign to combat misinformation and build support for GM foodsFootnote 21 but also mobilized Chinese scientists, most notably the father of hybrid rice, Yuan Longping 袁隆平, to endorse GMOs publicly.Footnote 22
In addition, the importance of GM technology has been stressed by the No. 1 Documents – the central government's prime directive – for many years (see Appendix A in supplementary material). Shortly after Xi's statements, the 2014 No. 1 Document was published, in which it called for strengthening biotechnology research and development. Then in 2015, for the first time, the country's No. 1 Document prioritized the scientific popularization of agricultural GM biotechnology. The 2016 No. 1 Document added to this by calling for reinforcing agricultural GM technology development and oversight and cautiously promoting the commercialization of GMOs. Also, in many No. 1 Documents (such as those of 2010, 2019, 2021 and 2022), though GM technology was not explicitly mentioned, the term “biological breeding” (shengyu yuzhong 生物育种) has been used. Biological breeding is the collective name for modern agricultural biotech breeding, which includes the use of transgenic gene editing, whole genome selection, synthetic biology and other technologies. Nevertheless, GM technology is widely regarded as the core of biological breeding, and in the Chinese context, biological breeding and GM breeding (zhuangjiyin yuzhong 转基因育种) are often used interchangeablyFootnote 23 or bundled together in the form of “GM biological breeding” (zhuanjiyin shengwu yuzhong 转基因生物育种).Footnote 24 Moreover, in April 2016, MARA held a press conference on GMO development in China in which it was announced that during the 13th Five-Year Period (2016–2020), the country would carry out the following: (1) step up research on GM cotton and corn varieties; (2) accelerate the commercialization of new GM cotton and GM corn; and (3) take the lead in GM rice research and development.Footnote 25 In July 2016, the State Council released the 13th Five-Year Plan for Science and Technology Innovation (2016–2020). According to the plan, China aimed to push forward the commercialization of GM corn and GM soybeans by 2020.Footnote 26 Thus, notwithstanding setbacks in GMO commercialization and calls for exercising caution, developing GMOs has always been a strategic decision made by the Central Committee and the State Council, and the country is determined to steadily achieve the commercialization of GMOs with Chinese seeds.Footnote 27
Despite the strong and consistent central support for GMO development, in December 2016, Heilongjiang province, which grows more than 10 per cent of China's grain, introduced a provincial ban on GM crops, which forbids not only the cultivation of GM crops but also the production, processing and trading of GM foods and products that contain GM ingredients.Footnote 28 Legally speaking, local regulations that the People's Congresses issue at the provincial level cannot be in conflict with the constitution or the national government's laws. China's National Food Safety Law only states that GM food (processed GM products rather than GM crops) needs to be labelled accordingly. In other words, Heilongjiang's 2016 provincial GMO ban, as an amendment to its food safety regulation, does not align with the National Food Safety Law. Also, at the national level, the plantation of GM crops is governed by the National Seed Law and the Regulation on Administration of Safety of Agricultural Genetically Modified Organisms, which only prohibits illegal plantation of GM crops. Heilongjiang's amendment to its food safety regulation was, however, intended as a complete ban on GM crop plantations.Footnote 29 More importantly, Heilongjiang's GMO ban also covers the processing, trading and import of GM foods or products containing GM ingredients, which are allowed at the national level.
As expected, Heilongjiang's GMO ban added fuel to the already heated debate over GMOs in China. In particular, Heilongjiang's GMO ban attracted rare public criticisms from several state media outlets. China's Science and Technology Daily (S&TD) (Keji ribao 科技日报), the party mouthpiece under the Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST), published an article on 22 December 2016 cautioning that misguided public opinion should not sway scientific decisions.Footnote 30 The Guangming Daily (Guangming ribao 光明日报), a major mouthpiece of the Central Committee, also published an editorial criticizing Heilongjiang for conflicting with the State Council's authority over GMOs.Footnote 31 Similar criticism was also expressed in an article published by the Beijing Times (Jinhua shibao 京华时报), which is part of the People's Daily (PD) (Renmin ribao 人民日报) Group, the top mouthpiece of the Central Committee. In particular, the Beijing Times pointed out that Heilongjiang's ban goes against the central government's pledge to pursue the commercialization of GM corn and soybean by 2020.Footnote 32 Furthermore, The Paper (Pengpai 澎湃), which the CCP Shanghai Committee oversees, also published an article questioning the legitimacy of Heilongjiang's GMO ban.Footnote 33
While PD did not get directly involved in this open clash, its online platform (People.cn) reposted the S&TD article on Heilongjiang's GMO ban.Footnote 34 Similarly, although the Farmer's Daily (FD) (Nongmin ribao 农民日报) under MARA did not respond directly to Heilongjiang's GMO ban, at the press conference of the annual “Two Sessions” (lianghui 两会) in March 2017, Zhang Taolin 张桃林, the vice minister of MARA, while responding to questions related to GMOs, stressed two points. First, GM technology is the frontier technology of modern biotechnology, which has great potential in reducing costs and increasing efficiency, reducing the application of pesticides and promoting green development in agriculture (a rebuttal of the Heilongjiang officials’ claim that the GMO ban is about achieving green development in agriculture). He also stressed that GMOs are safe (a rebuttal of the Heilongjiang officials’ claim that GMOs are not safe). Second, on the development of GMOs in China, Zhang reaffirmed the central government's steadfast support and reintroduced the country's GMO commercialization roadmap (from cash crops to feed crops and to staple crops).Footnote 35 Therefore, through the lens of central–local relations, Heilongjiang's GMO ban can be considered a case of local defiance against central policy. As discussed previously, the central government has made a strategic decision to develop GMOs and has been determined to steadily achieve their commercialization. In particular, in its 13th Five-Year Plan, China aimed to advance the commercialization of GM soybeans and corn by 2020. Given that Heilongjiang is the largest soybean producer and a major corn producer, its GMO ban severely undermines the central government's GMO commercialization plan and the country's long-term objective of occupying the commanding heights of GM technology.Footnote 36 Moreover, one of the key reasons for the delayed process in the commercialization of GM crops in China is widespread public resistance towards GMOs due to safety concerns. That is the reason why right after Xi Jinping's GMO statements, efforts were made by the central government to crack down on misinformation and improve public GMO education. For instance, according to a circular issued on 12 January 2015, MARA asked local governments to crack down on advertisements that hint that non-GM food is safer than GMOs.Footnote 37 In this context, Heilongjiang's high-profile GMO ban as an amendment to its food safety regulation and local officials’ claims that GMOs are unsafe has greatly undermined the central government's efforts to improve public confidence in the safety of GMOs.
Local Protectionism behind Heilongjiang's GM Crop Ban
Heilongjiang's controversial 2016 GMO ban can be considered the climax of its decades-long anti-GMO movement. Protecting local soybean sectors has been the key reason behind Heilongjiang's apparent deviation, or arguably defiance, of the central GMO policy. Heilongjiang is the country's largest producer of non-GM soybeans, with numerous crushing plants that process non-GM soybeans.Footnote 38 However, after China began importing soybeans in 1995, the country quickly emerged as the world's largest soybean importer. The immense inflow of GM soybeans has resulted in a large-scale closedown of soybean-crushing factories in Heilongjiang.Footnote 39 As pointed out by Chung, when provincial governments have high stakes in a particular policy and their interests significantly differ from those of the centre, it is more likely that the provincial government will actively defy central policy.Footnote 40
Heilongjiang started its battle against GMOs when it began to provide subsidies for non-GMO production in the early 2000s. In 2005, at a provincial People's Congress meeting, ten deputies proposed to protect Heilongjiang's non-GM soybean industry through legal measures. Two years later, in 2007, to counter pressure from the influx of GM soybeans, Heilongjiang not only established its own soybean association but also founded the China Soybean Association. Since then, the Heilongjiang Soybean Association and various provincial departments have sought to protect the local soybean industry by designating Heilongjiang as a non-GM soybean protection area (Table 1).
Source: Compiled by the authors based on search results from PKUlaw, CNKI and other sources.
While the initial motivation of Heilongjiang's anti-GMO efforts is undoubtedly to protect its local soybean sector, the Heilongjiang provincial government has also gradually aimed to gain leverage in the market to charge a premium for its non-GM soybean products. Heilongjiang has used food safety concerns to advance local interests by portraying GM soybeans as unsafe. Since the 2008 tainted-milk scandal and a litany of other food scandals, Chinese consumers have become wary of national regulation around food and agriculture; this extends to resistance towards national GMO policy. The low public acceptance of GMOs has created an opportunity for non-GM soybeans. In 2017, China's domestic soybean crushing plants were prepared to pay over 1,000 yuan (about US$150) more per tonne for Heilongjiang's non-GM soybeans, compared with imported GM soybeans, as consumers increasingly prefer non-GM soybean oil.Footnote 41
Apart from soybean products, a growing middle-class is willing to pay a premium for a wide range of safer and high-quality food products, which in the Chinese context usually refers to “green food” (lüse shiping 绿色食品). Green food, a Chinese eco-certification scheme for food, is defined as agricultural products cultivated with controlled and reduced pesticide use and has a testing regime for pesticide residues. China's green food industry has undergone rapid expansion over the past decade.Footnote 42 Regarding the regional distribution of China's green food industry, Heilongjiang is second to none. As seen in Table 2, Heilongjiang's green food industry comprises nearly 40 per cent of the national total in terms of plantation area and nearly 30 per cent of output. As demand for quality food products soars, Heilongjiang's agricultural and food sectors have benefited enormously, and the food sector has become the second largest industry in the province after oil and natural gas.Footnote 43 Therefore, faced with sluggish petroleum and coal industries, the Heilongjiang provincial government has naturally turned its attention to the growing green food industry as the new driver for its economic growth.Footnote 44 In 2010, the Heilongjiang provincial government listed green food as the first in the top ten priority sectors for provincial economic growth. Heilongjiang's push for green food development has accelerated under Lu Hao 陆昊, who became the governor of Heilongjiang in March 2013. In June 2013, Lu Hao held a provincial food sector development conference. At the conference, Lu urged governments at all levels and relevant departments to take the responsibility and obligation to support, maintain and protect the overall image of green, organic and pollution-free food from Heilongjiang, to implement the province's Green Excellence Strategy and to develop the green food industry. Two months later, in August 2013, the Heilongjiang provincial government decided to hold the first Heilongjiang Green Food Industry Expo in Harbin and formulated the Heilongjiang Green Food Industry Development Guidelines, which listed non-GM soy oil as one of the priority areas. In January 2014, in his first provincial government work report, Lu called provincial officials to build Heilongjiang into a national green food base. Further to these remarks, Lu noted at the annual Two Sessions in 2015 and 2016 that a green food branding and marketing strategy was needed.
Source: China Green Food Development Center 2019.
Nevertheless, Heilongjiang's push to transform the province into a green food powerhouse has not been without difficulties. First, before the ban on GM crops, Heilongjiang maintained a de facto ban on processing GM soybeans in its province. As a result, it has become widely known in China that non-GM soybeans come from Heilongjiang. However, due to the lack of a formal certification system and lax law enforcement on the mislabelling of food products, many GM soybean products are intentionally labelled as non-GMOs, thereby damaging the interests of Heilongjiang's non-GM soybean farmers and processors. Second, between 2015 and 2016, several reports found that many Heilongjiang farmers illegally planted GM soybean seeds. This revelation posed a major threat to Heilongjiang's green food industry. In this context, in the eyes of the Heilongjiang officials, a complete GMO ban sends a strong and clear message to wealthy Chinese consumers and to neighbouring countries that the province produces non-GM green food.Footnote 45 This also explains why the Heilongjiang provincial government was not afraid of public backlash against its provincial bans and why the Heilongjiang Daily (HD) (Heilongjiang ribao 黑龙江日报), the mouthpiece of the Heilongjiang provincial CCP committee, has engaged in a rare open clash with central mouthpieces over GMOs. Essentially, Heilongjiang's 2016 GMO ban was intended as a high-profile branding campaign for the province's green food industry. In fact, several articles published in HD openly described the province's anti-GMO efforts as part of Heilongjiang's branding campaigns to promote itself as China and North-East Asia's “green food base.”Footnote 46 For instance, on 12 January 2017, HD published a GMO article entitled “Heilongjiang Plays the GM Crop Ban Card [to promote the Green Food industry].”Footnote 47 More importantly, as Lu Hao, the then governor of Heilongjiang province, stated in December 2016, Heilongjiang province should not be afraid of controversy and that by issuing the ban, more people will notice what efforts the province has gone to in order to develop non-GM food and protect food safety. Footnote 48
Feeding Public Distrust, Exploiting Central Ambiguity and Skilful Issue Framing
Open resistance against or even deviation from the central policy carries high political risks for the local leaders. Hence, how did the Heilongjiang provincial government manage the political risks of its high-profile GMO ban? In general, Heilongjiang has taken three main approaches, namely: (1) feeding public distrust of GMOs; (2) exploiting the internal divide and central ambiguity over GMOs; and (3) skilful framing of its GMO ban.
First, while the GMO debate initially centred on its social-economic impacts, frequent food safety scares have increased food safety scepticism in China and expressed attitudes towards GM foods. As a result, safety has emerged as the dominant theme in GMO debates. Given the gravity of food safety concerns in China, the central government has become sensitive to negative public views of GMOs. Conversely, Heilongjiang not only sees great opportunity for its non-GM soybean industry but also actively feeds the public's growing distrust of GMOs. A key approach in Heilongjiang's plan to revive its soybean sector is to emphasize the safety advantages of non-GMOs.Footnote 49 Heilongjiang officials, scholars and industrial actors claim that Heilongjiang's non-GM soybeans are healthier and more natural than GM products. More importantly, Heilongjiang officials and affiliated actors have contributed to the public's distrust of GMOs. For example, in June 2013, the Heilongjiang Soybean Association published a report that linked the high rates of cancer and other serious health issues across China with the consumption of GM soybean oil owing to Roundup – the most widely used herbicide for GM soybeans.Footnote 50 The central authorities, such as MARA, and major state media outlets, such as PD and Xinhuanet, quickly published articles rejecting these claims while expressing support for GMOs.Footnote 51
However, the message that “GMOs cause cancer” quickly became deeply ingrained in the minds of consumers.Footnote 52 HD further fed public concern about the safety of GMOs by publishing several articles implying that GMOs are unsafe. For instance, in 2014, Jin Guojun 靳国君, an adviser and retired senior official in the Heilongjiang provincial government, published an article in HD, stating “There are indeed risks associated with GMOs, not all GM food products are safe … thus towards GM food, assessment can never be too strict.”Footnote 53 Also, in 2018, HD published another article stating, “China's top scientific, medical and military medical research institutions have reached the conclusion that genetically modified soybeans are unsafe.”Footnote 54 S&TD later rebuked HD's articles for containing “seriously misleading” information and crossing the “moral and legal red line.”Footnote 55
Apart from publishing articles in local media, Heilongjiang senior officials have also directly inflated public distrust of GMOs. In December 2016, Heilongjiang's provincial government held a press conference to explain its GM crop ban. At the press conference, Yao Dawei 姚大为, director of the provincial legislature, said, “while the province supports the research and development of GM technology, the techniques must be applied cautiously as there is uncertainty regarding the safety of GMOs.”Footnote 56 Furthermore, as previously mentioned, Lu Hao, Heilongjiang's then governor, claimed that the purpose of the GMO ban is to demonstrate to the public the effort that the province has undertaken to develop non-GM food and protect food safety.Footnote 57 Also, the fact that Heilongjiang's GMO ban was introduced through an amendment to the provincial food safety regulationFootnote 58 further adds to the general public's concerns about the safety of GMOs.
In turn, growing public distrust of GMOs has become a key source of legitimacy for Heilongjiang province's GMO ban. Indeed, the Heilongjiang provincial government has stated that 91.5 per cent of the province's residents object to GMOs as the legal basis for its amendment to the provincial food safety regulation.Footnote 59 As concern for the safety of GMOs grows, the public's support for GMOs in China has reduced significantly over the years, dropping from 40–50 per cent in the early 2000s to around 10 per cent in 2016.Footnote 60 A 2018 study further suggests that the Chinese general public GMO support rate ranged from 7 to 16 per cent across various demographic subgroups.Footnote 61 Therefore, widespread consumer scepticism of GMOs means that Heilongjiang's GMO ban enjoys public support while also supporting GMO distrust.
Second, the Heilongjiang provincial government has sought to exploit “ambiguity” in central policy to reduce the potential political backlash of its GMO ban. The Chinese polity is often considered a model of fragmented authoritarianism whereby power and responsibility are divided horizontally between state ministries with different and overlapping functional responsibilities that are delegated vertically to provincial and local levels of government.Footnote 62 Due to disjointed and overlapping power and responsibilities between central ministries and departments,Footnote 63 opportunities exist for other policy actors, such as subnational governments, “to ally with sympathetic agencies in the process of policy entrepreneurship,” as well as to continue to push boundaries.Footnote 64 Within the Chinese government, while MARA is the central government department responsible for nationwide supervision and administration of agricultural GMOs, there are other central ministries and departments with a varied extent of involvement in GMO governance. Over the years, as the GMO debate in China has moved beyond scientific discussion into social, environmental, moral, legal, political and strategic domains, there appears to be internal resistance towards GMOs. Notably, China's military establishment and People's Liberation Army (PLA) strategists have voiced strong concerns about GMO safety and the potential national security risks associated with GMOs. Not only did a few vocal military leaders echo the Heilongjiang Soybean Association's claim that GMOs could cause cancer and infertility, but in 2014, it was reported that Hubei and Guangzhou military officials requested a ban on GMO food for their troops on the ground of safety concerns.Footnote 65 Moreover, several PLA strategists, such as Senior Colonel Dai Xu 戴旭, Major General Peng Guangqian 彭光谦 and Rear Admiral Luo Yuan 罗援, argue that GMOs should be viewed as a grand Western scheme – bioweapons launched by the United States against China.Footnote 66 In 2013, an educational movie jointly produced by the National Defence University, two departments under the Ministry of National Defence, and the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (CAAS), claimed that the United States is using GMOs to destroy China.Footnote 67 In December of the same year, at the 12th National Security Forum in Beijing, a few Chinese generals, including the retired Lieutenant General Mi Zhengyu 糜振玉, a top PLA strategist, criticized GMOs for threatening China's national security and called for the establishment of a biosecurity defence system. In addition, the Ministry of Ecology and Environment (formerly the Ministry of Environmental Protection) has long adopted a rather conservative approach towards GMOs, and notably, it has collaborated with Greenpeace on studying and disseminating mainly the negative environmental impacts of GMOs.Footnote 68 Conversely, MARA, MOST and other important central actors adopt a pro-GMO stance. For instance, the Ministry of Commerce and China's largest state-owned agribusiness – China Oil and Foodstuffs Corporation (COFCO) – strongly opposed the establishment of the China Soybean Association due to its anti-GMO stance.Footnote 69 The internal divide over GMOs creates a window of opportunity for Heilongjiang in two ways: strengthening ties with like-minded central ministries and forming alliances with other actors.
Equally, the internal divide and fragmentation make the GMO policymaking process increasingly subject to the influence of non-state actors, such as non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and enterprises and provided fertile ground for the rapid development of the anti-GMO movement in China.Footnote 70 For instance, Greenpeace, an international NGO, has played a prominent role “in fighting against the introduction of GM crops, especially GM rice, in China.”Footnote 71 The rising anti-GMO movement, in turn, has in part forced the central government to slow down the commercialization of GM crops in the country. Furthermore, facing mounting domestic resistance and out of fear of foreign control over China's GMO market, the central government has adopted an incremental approach towards GMOs. This incremental approach can be summarized as follows: fast-forwarding GMO research and public education while cautiously promoting GMO commercialization in three phases, starting with cash crops “not for food use” (cotton), followed by crops used as input for feed and industrial use (such as soybean and corn) and finally by staple crops (such as rice and wheat). However, the incremental approach can appear ambiguous as it sends mixed and sometimes confusing messages to the public. For instance, to prevent foreign control of the Chinese GM seeds market and establish a better intellectual property right regime to foster faster development of China's own GM seed companies, China has launched several high-profile crackdowns on the illegal plantation of GM crops in the country.Footnote 72 The news reports that GMO research institutes are punished, distributors and farmers are locked up and the images of burning fields of GMO crops have certainly undermined the government's message that GMOs are safe.
It is precisely due to this huge public resistance, internal divide and the seemingly confusing messages delivered by the central government's incremental approach towards GMOs that have created opportunities for Heilongjiang to frame its provincial GMO ban. Unsurprisingly, the Heilongjiang provincial government has positioned its provincial GMO ban as a direct response to the central government's call for caution towards GMOs while also expressing its support for further GMO research. As Yao Dawei put it, “We support the research and development of transgenic technology, but we should be cautious in applying the techniques in crop production” – almost the exact phrases used by Xi on GMOs.Footnote 73
Finally, the Heilongjiang provincial government skilfully and successfully frames its provincial GMO ban as the province's resolve to implement Xi Jinping's Green Development Concept (lüse fazhanguang 绿色发展观). In China, the central government imposes numerous tasks on the local governments, and these policy tasks are hierarchically ranked against each other.Footnote 74 Among these tasks, a few are priority tasks with veto effect; failing to achieve them could cancel out all other work performances or lead to termination of political careers or even imprisonment in extreme cases. As far as Heilongjiang's attempt to frame its GMO ban is concerned, apart from the central GMO policy, the other closely related central task is to promote the Green Development Concept championed by Xi Jinping (see Figure 1). As compared to the central GMO policy, which not only is a sectoral policy with comparatively lower priority for the local governments but also faces huge public and internal resistance, the Green Development Concept championed by Xi is a higher priority central task that is both well-articulated and widely supported. Since taking office in 2012, Xi has begun to promote the “Two Mountain Theory” (liangshan lun 两山论), calling clear waters and green mountains invaluable assets comparable to the gold and silver of legend, which later evolved into the Green Development Concept.Footnote 75 In addition, the Green Development Concept became an integral part of Xi Jinping Thought on Ecological Civilization (Xi Jinping shengtaiwenming sixiang 习近平生态文明思想), which was later enshrined in both the CCP constitution in 2017 and China's national constitution in 2018. With such emphasis placed on green development by Xi, it is unequivocal that the central government is determined to develop green initiatives. Meanwhile, local governments, which have long embraced a traditional model of development that emphasizes economic growth at the expense of the environment, have since advocated for environmentally sustainable development as a means to a better quality of life.Footnote 76
A key industry targeted in Xi Jinping's green development push is agriculture. On many occasions, Xi Jinping has called for implementing the Green Development Concept and accelerating the development of energy-saving and environmentally friendly agriculture. As one of the most important agricultural regions, Xi has personally called on Heilongjiang's leaders to follow the Green Development Concept and focus on green agriculture. For instance, during the 2016 Two Sessions, Xi spoke to the Heilongjiang delegation, calling for additional wetland protection and strengthening both the “Ecological Civilization” (shengtaiwenming 生态文明) and Green Development Concept in the province. Two months later, Xi further urged local governments to maintain the principle of green agriculture development during an inspection tour in Heilongjiang. In September 2018, during Xi's second inspection visit to Heilongjiang, he stated to a local government official that “it is necessary to speed up the development of green agriculture and work to avoid the loss and degradation of black soil.”Footnote 77
Regarding central policies, there is no conflict between Xi's Green Development Concept (including green agriculture (lüse nongye 绿色农业) and green food) and the central GMO policy. Instead, GM technology is considered critical to achieving green agriculture. In 2017, China released guidelines on green development in agriculture, setting zero-growth targets for the use of chemical fertilisers and pesticides and stipulating controlled exploitation of groundwater. In China, green food, which presents a middle way between chemical and organic farming, is mainly concerned with reducing pesticide use.Footnote 78 Indeed, one of the most prominent threats to the sustainability of China's agriculture is its over-reliance on chemical fertilisers and pesticides.Footnote 79 In this regard, GM technology has proven advantages in reducing the need for toxic fertiliser, pesticides and irrigation.Footnote 80 Hence, from the central government's perspective, GM technology is vital for China to achieve green agricultural development. In July 2018, MARA published the “Guide for Green Development Technology for Agriculture, 2018–2030,” stipulating that GM technology is the top priority for strengthening the development of green agricultural technology.Footnote 81
However, to anti-GMO groups and the general public, green food (and green agriculture) and GMOs are at opposite ends of the same spectrum. The Heilongjiang provincial government, like other anti-GMO groups, plays up the environmental risks of GMOs by framing the province's ban as part of the provincial government's efforts to develop the local green food industry. As Li Qixiang 李启祥, a senior official with the Legislative Affairs Commission of Heilongjiang, explained, the province's GMO ban is necessitated by the development of the green food industry.Footnote 82 On the other hand, Heilongjiang has tactically associated green food with organic food. For instance, the provincial government organizes an annual event called the Heilongjiang International Green Organic Food Industry Expo. As it is widely accepted that organic food must be GMO-free,Footnote 83 it is therefore assumed that to develop Heilongjiang into a green food centre of the country and region, it must also become GMO-free. This sentiment is clearly reflected in a statement by Wang Jinhui 王金会, director of the agricultural and rural affairs department of Heilongjiang province:
Sticking to the concept of green development, strengthening environmental protection and utilization of resources, turning clear water and green mountains into golden mountains and silver mountains, and transforming resources and ecological advantages into economic advantages and development advantages are the ardent expectations and wishes of General Secretary Xi Jinping to Heilongjiang. In this regard, the provincial party committee and the provincial government have clearly proposed to play the cards of our black soil, non-GMO and green-organic as specific and prioritized measures to turn Heilongjiang into a strong agricultural province.Footnote 84
Many other Heilongjiang officials and departments have expressed similar statements. For instance, in December 2020, the Heilongjiang provincial development and reform commission published an article stating that Heilongjiang will continue to rely on green-organic and non-GMO brands to develop its agriculture.Footnote 85
Conclusion
Through a comprehensive content analysis of GMO articles published by party mouthpieces, official policy documents, industry reports and academic papers, this study finds that Heilongjiang's province-wide GMO ban in 2016 was a high-profile branding campaign. The overarching goal of this campaign was to protect its non-GM soybean sector and promote the province's fast-growing green food industry. This study contributes to the research on central–local relations in China. While subnational governments in general have considerable “room to manoeuvre,”Footnote 86 the extent of autonomy or manoeuvrability space enjoyed by subnational governments is issue specific. In some issue areas, fragmentation may be more severe and central government policies may be particularly unclear, inconsistent or lacking public support. Consequently, not only are subnational governments generally confronted with substantial confusion and uncertainty,Footnote 87 opportunities are created for subnational governments to challenge the central policies. As the GMO case presented in this paper shows, when the issue is highly controversial and there is a large internal divide, subnational governments enjoy greater policy space in which to advance their local interests. This can be done through various means, such as exploiting central policy ambiguities, rallying public support and skilful issue framing.
Supplementary material
The appendices are available online as supplementary material at http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0305741023001017.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore. We would like to express our gratitude to Li Mingjiang, Zhan Shaohua, Christine Wong, Jae Ho Chung, Benjamin William Cashore, Qian Jiwei and Adam Liu for their valuable comments and suggestions. We are also grateful to Genevieve Donnellon-May for her proofreading. Their contributions have greatly improved the quality of this work.
Competing interests
None.
Hongzhou ZHANG is a research fellow with the China Programme at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. He received his PhD in Public Policy from the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore. His main research interests include regional and global resources conflicts and governance, game theory, discourse analysis and emerging technologies.
Alfred M. WU is an associate professor in the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore. His research interests include public sector reform, central–local fiscal relations, corruption and governance, and social protection in Greater China.