
-
Water shortages plague Beirut as low rainfall compounds woes
-
Germany's Thyssenkrupp cuts targets as US tariffs weigh
-
Brady didn't understand football, says Rooney after 'work ethic' jibe
-
Greek firefighters make progress against wildfires
-
UK economy slows less than feared after tariffs
-
Markets mixed as bitcoin hits new high
-
PSG begin French title defence as Pogba returns home and Paris FC step up
-
At least 40 dead in Sudan's worst cholera outbreak in years: MSF
-
Zelensky in London to meet PM ahead of US-Russia summit
-
French dictionary gets bad rap over Congolese banana leaf dish
-
Alaska: a source of Russian imperial nostalgia
-
Last chance saloon for global plastic pollution treaty
-
India to bid for Commonwealth Games as part of Olympic push
-
North Korea denies removing border loudspeakers
-
Despite risks, residents fight to protect Russian national park
-
Asian markets mixed as bitcoin surges to new high
-
War-weary Ukrainians find solace by frontline lake
-
Okinawa a reluctant host for US troops 80 years after WWII
-
Alonso's Real Madrid start La Liga with fresh energy
-
Liverpool splash out to secure status as Premier League's top dogs
-
Hong Kong court postpones closing arguments in Jimmy Lai trial
-
Top Japanese fighter retires to support comatose boxer brother
-
Boars, Butterflies or Bees? Public to name Papua New Guinea's NRL team
-
Defending champions Sinner, Sabalenka reach Cincinnati quarters
-
Bolivia presidential hopefuls make last push for votes
-
Trump orders space regulations eased in win for Musk
-
From Snoop Dogg to Tom Brady, stars flock to English second-tier clubs
-
Inside Trump's 'Alligator Alcatraz': detainees allege abuse in a legal black hole
-
Scientists find surprising sex reversal in Australian birds
-
Taylor Swift sets October release for new album
-
Oh carp: UK's Lammy on the hook after fishing with Vance without licence
-
ANITA & ZAHA Introduces Exclusive "Made in France" Natural Cosmetics
-
Sinner shrugs off rain to dispatch Mannarino in Cincinnati
-
Tainted fentanyl blamed for 87 hospital deaths in Argentina
-
Eyeing robotaxis, Tesla hiring New York test car operator
-
NBA approves $6.1bn sale of Boston Celtics
-
Cowboys owner Jones says experimental drug saved him after cancer diagnosis
-
Striking Boeing defense workers turn to US Congress
-
PSG beat Tottenham on penalties to win UEFA Super Cup
-
Hong Kong court to hear closing arguments in mogul Jimmy Lai's trial
-
US singer Billy Joel to sell off motorcycles due to health condition
-
Barcelona's Ter Stegen validated as long-term injury by La Liga
-
Storm makes landfall in China after raking Taiwan as typhoon
-
Colombia buries assassinated presidential candidate
-
Zverev finishes overnight job at Cincinnati Open
-
Bukele critics face long exile from El Salvador homeland
-
McIlroy 'shot down' suggestion of Ryder Cup playing captain role
-
'Water lettuce' chokes tourism, fishing at El Salvador lake
-
Peru's president signs military crimes amnesty bill into law
-
At least 26 migrants dead in two shipwrecks off Italy

Hong Kong team plants seeds to safeguard legacy grains
Far from the soaring skyscrapers synonymous with Hong Kong, scientists and farmers labour in a paddy field on the city's outskirts to revive dormant rice varieties that once sprung from local soil.
While agriculture accounts for less than 0.1 percent of the finance hub's GDP, researchers say homegrown grains could one day be an important food security insurance policy in the face of climate change -- while also feeding hometown pride in history, culture and identity.
Pointing at the clearly marked crops, researcher Mercury Wong said the seeds were brought from the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) in the Philippines -- where the Hong Kong government once deposited them -- as well as from the US Department of Agriculture.
"They are the only 20 Hong Kong rice varieties we are left with," he told AFP, seated by land reclaimed from wild ginger flower fields in the city's New Territories region.
Verdant curves of rice crops snaked around Hong Kong's hilly landscapes more than 50 years ago.
By the 1960s, authorities had turned to Southeast Asia for the food staple and encouraged local farmers to focus on more profitable agricultural projects such as vegetables.
Wong said the Hong Kong-origin grain from the Philippine and US seed banks was among tens of thousands of deposited varieties and were therefore considered "insignificant".
"But for us, because they used to grow in Hong Kong, they mean something very different," he said.
Wong, along with other researchers from Gift From Land, a small group dedicated to revitalising the dormant varieties, has been working since 2019 on this mission, which has yielded some surprising results.
In January, the team announced the discovery of two new types of "See Mew" -- one of the most popular non-glutinous rice varieties grown in southern China.
"It's a major piece of our history that we lost in the urban development... we think we may find some of our identity from this native variety of the rice," Wong said.
- Seeds from the past -
An important unanswered question about "Hong Kong rice" is whether there was truly any variety that originated from the city.
Gift From Land researchers noticed that some grown in Hong Kong decades ago might share the same name as those from the adjacent Pearl River Delta but they possess different features.
The search for an answer is also hindered by the lack of official rice-growing records in Hong Kong, as well as the passing of residents who had memories to share.
According to urban legend, some "See Mew" rice grown in Yuen Long, a border area in northwest Hong Kong, used to be given as tribute to China's emperors.
But Wong said they could not find any reliable historical evidence to support this.
The question remains: how then to define a Hong Kong-unique variety?
Wong, a former university research assistant in biology, confessed that the inquiry was not just a science project for him.
"I think it's a process to search for Hong Kong -- or to search for myself," he mused.
He is not alone in the quest to identify the genetic traits of Hong Kong rice -- the city's agriculture department has since 2020 funded a seed technology and education centre, SeedTEC, at a local university.
"Agriculture constitutes an important part of our history and culture," SeedTEC leader Lam Hon-ming said then.
In 2022, the lab reintroduced "Fa Yiu Tsai" -- one of the varieties the department had sent to IRRI in the 1960s -- to the market, urging local farmers to grow and sell the historical grain.
- Seeds for the future -
A more contemporary concern, however, revolves around Hong Kong's food security, particularly as climate change brings increasingly frequent extreme weather.
The city's 7.5 million people consume about 330,000 tonnes of rice annually, but in 2022 locally produced grains amounted to only 390 tonnes.
As reduced grain yield becomes a global issue, Wong said the situation can be especially "dangerous" coupled with Hong Kong's fluctuating climate.
Pollination will be affected if it is too hot, while extreme downpours -- such as the once-in-five-centuries rainstorm that hit the city last year -- are a huge source of "headache and panic for us", he said.
Siu-yuk, a part-time farmer with the project, said a resilient food supply comes from having a "diversity of sources -- some from here, some from mainland China, and some from overseas".
"If any one of them breaks down, you can rely on others."
While their one-hectare crop is on a small scale, she felt it was meaningful to retain seeds in Hong Kong, and the lot could grow into something used for wider production -- even outside the city.
"But you can't kickstart it without a seed from Hong Kong," Siu-yuk said. "There is no future possibility without a seed being saved."
F.Stadler--VB