
Niigata Pref. Students Learn About Agriculture, Climate Change on Texas Trip; Texas Students to Visit Niigata Pref. in August
Niigata students visit volunteer activities at a marshland in Texas.
Ten university students from Niigata Prefecture traveled to Texas in March to learn about agriculture and climate change as part of an exchange program between Japan and the United States.
The Japanese students were able to work with students in Texas during their six-day trip. The Texas students are scheduled to visit Niigata Prefecture this August.
The program is sponsored by the U.S.-Japan Council, which promotes exchanges between the two countries, with the cooperation of Tanaka Sangyo, a Joetsu-based construction company in Niigata Prefecture.
Tanaka Sangyo has been engaged in rice cultivation for about 30 years, growing rice on about 340 hectares. As more rice farmers are leaving the business, the company expanded its rice field by 150 hectares over the past five years by taking over the fields of others who have quit.
The partnership was made through an introduction by the U.S. Embassy in Japan, which had previously worked with the company.
The program started last October with 10 students from universities in Niigata Prefecture, including Niigata University, and eight students from Texas A&M University. After an online workshop, the Niigata Prefecture students went to the United States to learn about measures on tackling climate change.
While in Texas, the Niigata students went to a greenhouse that had automated equipment to manage plant growth, visited a large-scale range and saw crops being grown on the roof of a building in an urban area. The students also saw the effects of drought when they volunteered for marshland conservation activities.
Akiyuki Tanaka from Tanaka Sangyo hopes the exchange will let young people know that, as digitization and automation advance, agriculture can be fun and exciting.
Climate change
The Yomiuri Shimbun
Makoto Koide, left, shows a photo he took while visiting a greenhouse in Texas, in March in Niigata Prefecture.
Climate change will heavily affect the agricultural industry in Niigata Prefecture.
As of the end of October, only 4.3% of the Koshihikari variety of rice and only 14.0% of all the rice harvested in 2023 were considered high quality, the lowest ever.
'The price of rice is getting more expensive in Japan, and rice is disappearing from grocery stores,' said Mitsuki Ito, 20, who was a part of the group who went to Texas. 'I think the issue [of climate change] needs to be addressed worldwide.'
The students from Texas are scheduled to visit Niigata Prefecture in August, and they will observe the area's agricultural practices, which take advantage of having both mountains and the ocean nearby.
'The American students might be surprised by how small the scale of Japan's agriculture is, but I hope they will see the quality of it, too,' said Makoto Koide, a participant from Niigata University.
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