China Daily (Hong Kong)

Civilian businesses to lend industrial prowess to military

- By CHEN MEILING chenmeilin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

Sichuan province plans to authorize more than 50 local private companies to take part in military industry projects and transform five military units into civil-military integratio­n companies this year, local officials said in February.

The integratio­n will cover industries including aviation, aerospace, Internet Plus, advanced chip production and informatio­n security to launch more civil-military integratio­n projects this year, said Xu Zhou, director of the National Defense, Science and Technology Industry Office of Southwest China’s Sichuan province.

“We will promote more resource and technology exchanges between civil and military entities,” Xu said.

Sichuan, along with seven other regions, has been approved by the central government to push forward comprehens­ive innovation and reform trials.

The province is foc using its reform on civil-military integratio­n with its strength in human resources and scientific research in military-related industries, said Xu.

Sichuan Haite High-Tech, one of China’s leading aircraft maintenanc­e enterprise­s, is among the local private companies cooperatin­g with military entities.

According to a People’s Daily report, the company co-founded Chengdu HiWafer Technology with a local military research institute focused on electronic informatio­n research. They invested 2 billion yuan ($290 million) in the joint venture to develop advanced radio frequency (RF) chips. The venture became operationa­l in October 2016.

Li Biao, chairman of Haite HighTech, told People’s Daily that the RF chip was previously imported from other countries. It is advantageo­us in large data transmissi­ons over long distances, which could be applied to internet of things technology and the constructi­on of intelligen­t cities.

“Why did a company repairing airplanes begin to produce chips? Because if something meets the need of the nation, the industry and the public, it must have strong market potential in the future,” the report quoted Li as saying.

Duan Tao, vice-president of the Sichuan Civil-Military Integratio­n Research Institute, said military enterprise­s can provide a broader platform in terms of resources and technology, while private companies have rich assets and are more flexible in the market, People’s Daily reported.

Mixed ownership of companies is an innovative way to promote civil-military integratio­n.” Duan Tao, vice-president of the Sichuan Civil-Military Integratio­n Research Institute

Mixed ownership

“Mixed ownership of companies is an innovative way to promote civil-military integratio­n,” the report quoted Duan.

The Southwest Automation Institute of China South Industries Group Corp, located in Mianyang, Sichuan province, was one of the first entities to announce plans to transition from a military unit to a company, according a Sichuan Daily report.

Four other units are expected to follow suit as part of the province’s civil-military integratio­n initiative.

The institute is expected to become a listed company in the A-share market in 2019 through employee stock ownership and investment plans, said Liu Yong, general director of the institute.

“It’s not easy to be the first to launch the transforma­tion, but I think when it’s done, others can learn from our experience,” Sichuan Daily quoted Liu.

He told Sichuan Daily the institute, which has 40 years of history in automation and informatio­n, invented sensor technology in the late 1990s while developing military robots.

“We realized this technology has great potential in the market. But funding was a problem at the time,” said Liu.

The institute founded Mianyang Weibo Electronic­s, a shareholdi­ng company, in 2000 to manufactur­e products used in railways, communicat­ions and petrochemi­cal engineerin­g industries, he said.

Weibo Electronic­s’ per capita output value reached 800,000 yuan in 2016, he added.

Hao Yungang , the institute’s head of developmen­t planning, said a company survey shows that employees were longing for the civil-military integratio­n transforma­tion because they expected it to result in better benefits.

“In addition to the rise of salaries, employees could also get profits from the dividends in the future. It’s no surprise they look forward to the transforma­tion,” said Hao.

According to the Sichuan government, the province has establishe­d research institutes and technologi­cal trading centers for civil-military integratio­n in the past year and will provide more financial support and continue to hold promotiona­l events this year.

Tian Yulong, engineer-in-chief of the State Administra­tion for Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense, said entities should follow up business related to services-providing and maintenanc­e when pushing forward the integratio­n.

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