China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tea project discovers a fresh blend to end poverty

- By HU MEIDONG ZHANG YI Yang Jie contribute­d to this story. Contact the writers at zhangyi1@chinadaily.com.cn

Wang Judi, the director of a teaproduci­ng cooperativ­e in Xiadang township, Ningde, Fujian province, was worried this summer about pests damaging growers’ crops.

To ensure the quality of the cooperativ­e’s tea products, the main source of income for the town’s residents, Wang, 44, organized the growers to take pest prevention and control measures.

In 2015, due to his experience in tea sampling, Wang was appointed head of the tea cooperativ­e, which was launched to help residents address poverty. Before that, Wang’s family income was low, as he was a tea seller and his wife grew tea at their farm.

Xiadang is isolated and surrounded by mountains, and there are limited crops the farmers can grow on the slopes. However, the subtropica­l climate, soil and terraced hills are suitable for tea planting. The residents had grown tea for generation­s, but due to a lack of advanced agricultur­al and management methods yields were low and earnings poor.

In 2015, the first customized teagrowing project in China was created in the town to help alleviate poverty. Under the project, a company markets the products and a cooperativ­e manages the farmers and their tea production.

Buyers sign a contract with the company to purchase tea at a set price from the plantation­s that are part of the cooperativ­e.

The tea growers maintain ownership of their plantation­s, but what they produce is owned by the buyers for the term of the contract. The buyers can check the whole growing and production process through a video-monitoring system installed in the plantation­s.

The tea growers have to follow quality control standards laid down by the cooperativ­e. Advanced technologi­es and online sales, including livestream­ed advertisem­ents, have also been adopted to support the process.

“I have learned a lot from the project, going from being a tea seller to someone in charge of the whole process of the town’s tea industry,” Wang said. “I feel satisfied and delighted when profits from the tea project are distribute­d to every farmer.”

The management model used to improve the quality of the tea has raised the price. The annual income tea growers earn from a hectare of plantation has increased from 30,000 ($4,392) yuan to 90,000 yuan in recent years, according to official data.

All the 508 registered povertystr­icken households in the town were lifted out of poverty in 2018. The per capita disposable income of farmers increased from 186 yuan in 1988 to 14,777 yuan last year.

Lin Zhikun, deputy head of the town, said: “Under the mechanism, people share risks and benefits together. All profits generated by the tea plantation­s will be returned to the farmers after deducting necessary expenses, so as to drive all people toward a well-off life.”

Xiang Zhonghong, Party secretary of the town, said the mechanism integrates agricultur­al products, farmers and the labor force and helps individual farmers connect to large markets to steadily increase their incomes.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A farmer works in a tea plantation in Xiadang township, Ningde, Fujian province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A farmer works in a tea plantation in Xiadang township, Ningde, Fujian province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States