On the field of electric power hope

Amidst the golden wheat waves, a row of silver-gray transmission towers stretch towards the horizon - these are not isolated industrial symbols, but rather the "electricity network" laid out across the fields.

During the wheat harvest season, the combine harvester rumbles, relying on energy from the distant power grid for its electric drive system and the intelligent field irrigation pumps. The high-voltage electricity carried by the transmission towers depends on the "precise voltage regulation" of transformers in substations along the line: converting the high voltage of the transmission lines into low voltage electricity suitable for agricultural machinery and irrigation equipment, ensuring sufficient power while avoiding equipment overload.

Fields that once relied on human labor are now efficient thanks to electricity: electric agricultural machinery harvests and sows swiftly, and intelligent temperature-controlled greenhouses produce crops all year round. These "strengths" are all hidden in the synergy between iron towers and transformers. The bountiful harvest of waving wheat is not only a gift from the land but also a hope woven by electricity - every silver wire and every transformer are converting industrial energy into annual bountiful harvests in the fields.