Greenhouse chili peppers boost poverty relief
Chili peppers grown in greenhouses provide a better way for Shen Anyi, 57, a villager in Wuxi village under Nanchang city's Anyi county in East China's Jiangxi province, to feed his family.
Before he starting planting for a local agriculture company that runs a chili pepper business, Shen earned roughly 7,000 yuan ($1,109) each year by farming his own land.
"Now my annual income exceeds 30,000 yuan, a figure I could not even imagine in the past," Shen said.
The harvested chili peppers are shipped to agricultural wholesale markets in the nearby major cities of Nanchang and Jiujiang.
Gong Desheng, board chairman of the company, said there are two harvest seasons each year for chili peppers at the company's base, and the daily output during harvest ranges from 10 to 20 tons.
Now that there is constant production throughout the entire year, the efficiency of land use has increased by 10 times, Gong said.
"Now the market demand is very steady… and the annual output here is valued at about 30 million yuan," Gong added.
- Shanghai airport lays on Spring Festival welcome for world travelers
- China Eastern Airlines announces new Xi'an-Vienna route
- Guangxi villagers perform Spring Ox Dance to welcome spring
- China reports decline in serious crimes, strengthens measures against judicial corruption
- Egrets forage at sunset on Qingdao's Zhangcun River
- Chongqing hosts western China's largest water lantern festival




























