JINAN, China (AP) — Shi Mei and her husband earn a decent enough living by growing corn and millet on their small farm in eastern China’s Shandong province. In 2021, they diversified by investing in solar energy — signing a contract to mount some 40 panels on their roof to feed energy to the grid. Now, the couple get paid for every watt of electricity they generate, harvesting the equivalent of $10,000 per year that Shi can track through an app on her phone. “When the sun comes out, you make money,” Shi said. |
Movement of pilot's seat a focus of probe into LATAM Boeing flight, report saysCrucial route in Northland reopens after truck crashMoscow attack: Russian court charges four men with act of terrorismBill to Fund US Government Includes Money to Counter China in PacificAustralian foreign aid worker among five killed in Israel airstrike on Gaza3D printed eggs used in fairy tern rescue programmeUS House passes bill that could ban TikTok nationwide403,000 people's personal information taken in MediaWorks cyberattackMan accused of Ellerslie murder namedBaltimore bridge collapse: two fathers named among victims