US content creator Evan Kail praises Chinese power sector

From mountain-top photovoltaic patrol stations to purpose-built refuges for wildlife, and from guardians of rare firs to bilingual service counters—American content creator Evan Kail's recent journey into Lishui, Zhejiang, was meant to be a hunt for exotic mushrooms. Instead, it became a profound dialogue between conservation and green electricity. Following the trail of the "Green-Energy Ark," Kail explored how State Grid Zhejiang has learned to coexist with one of China's 17 globally significant biodiversity hotspots, witnessing a power network that protects the living landscape it traverses.
A winding mountain road crunched beneath his boots. Near a tower construction site, Kail noticed stone cavities covered with native turf—artificial yet indistinguishable from the surrounding vegetation. "These repurposed spoil mounds are micro-refuges for small mammals and birds; squirrels and hares visit daily," Ye Yangguang, a State Grid Zhejiang linesman, said. The practice—part of the 220 kV Qingdong project—relies on drone transport to reduce road cuts, topsoil preservation, and targeted habitat creation to keep construction disturbance to an absolute minimum.
Technology at work: Dual mandate for mountain grids
Deep in the Baishanzu Reserve, photovoltaic panels shimmer atop a research station roof, feeding a silent micro-grid that powers humidity controllers and drip-irrigation for saplings of the critically endangered Baishanzu fir. "Before, storms used to knock the power out for days," Lan Rongguang, the reserve's director, said. "Now the 'Green-Energy Ark' delivers 24-hour supply, and these embryo seedlings from Zhejiang University have already reached shoulder height."
Drones now patrol the same ridges once covered on foot. Equipped with infrared cameras, they monitor both line integrity and wildlife. Linesmen double as rangers, trained to operate camera traps and conduct animal rescues. Ye scrolled through photos on his phone—rare pheasants, a rescued civet—evidence that the "power-plus-ecology" model is now routine in Baishanzu.
"In Qingyuan I'll treat you to wild-picked mountain tea; in Qingtian, to hometown coffee," Ye joked, illustrating State Grid Zhejiang's place-based ethos.
In Baishanzu, conservation is the priority; in the "hometown of overseas Chinese," Qingtian, cultural nuance takes the lead. A European-flavored quarter houses bilingual service counters and multilingual payment portals for returning expatriates and international visitors. Over a cup of Qingtian coffee, Kail realized that electricity here is more than energy—it is the quiet connective tissue between communities, cultures and landscapes.
From curiosity to comprehension, a simple quest for mushrooms revealed Zhejiang's formula: development and protection in harmony. The grid is omnipresent yet invisible—lighting the night, powering lives, and safeguarding the very mountains through which its current flows. Amid stone shelters for animals, micro-grids for rare trees, and bilingual counters for global citizens, Kail concluded that this is the living embodiment of "lucid waters and lush mountains are invaluable assets".
