Premier Li gets close look at China-made tractor
2017-05-09
China Daily
Premier Li Keqiang called on May 8 for further efforts to drive agricultural modernization and manufacturing upgrades amid China’s economic transformation.
Premier Li, during his inspection tour in Central China’s Henan province, visited an agricultural machinery manufacturing plant in Kaifeng and climbed aboard on a newly made tractor developed using domestic technology.
The Premier had previously proposed developing high-powered tractors to achieve technological breakthrough.
Premier Li also visited people living in a floodplain.
The tractor company recently designed and began making the farm tractor, which is powered by a 230-horsepower engine-a product that used to be dependent on overseas technology.
Wang Hongmei, the company’s office director, said the tractors are eagerly awaited in Northeast China as well as the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, where large-scale farming and deep plowing are common.
Premier Li, boarding the tractor and learning in detail about its operation from Wang Jinfu, deputy director of Zoomlion, stressed that such technology upgrades should be more widely applied to agriculture modernization.
With almost all control panels inside the operator’s cab, Wang explained that the tractor can be controlled with only one hand.
The application of big data as well as an internet platform also is used by the company for product information collection, as it also developed an internet monitoring platform for all of its machinery products across China.
Breakdown in any area of a machine will be monitored by the internet platform terminal, while such information and data platform are also used for Zoomlion sales.
The company has seen a consecutive increase in sales from January to April this year.
Henan province, located alongside the lower reaches of the Yellow River, has long relied on agricultural production.
On May 8, Premier Li paid visits to several households in Lizhuang township along the Yellow River floodplain area, where in villages scattered in low-lying areas suffer frequent flooding. Premier Li urged the relocation of these villages. The township has 18 villages undergoing such conditions.