China Daily (Hong Kong)

Nation focuses on ‘innovation ecosystem’

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

China will finish building the foundation of its national technology transfer system by 2020 and release a complete version by 2025, according to a recently released government paper.

The State Council published an outline for the system on Tuesday, saying it aims to facilitate innovation and economic developmen­t across regions, help turn scientific research into products and transform China into a science and technology powerhouse.

“This is the first time technology transfers have been examined thoroughly and systematic­ally at a national level,” Xu Jing, director of innovation and developmen­t for the Ministry of Science and Technology, said on Wednesday.

The outline examines the role of China’s main innovators — companies, universiti­es and research institutes — and the climate they face in the policy, legal, institutio­nal and market realms.

Xu said the outline will be a “blueprint for building a national ecosystem of innovation” that can adapt to market changes. It will also provide possible solutions to issues that can limit the efficiency of technology transfers, such as the allocation of research resources.

China’s trade in technology contracts generated 1.14 trillion yuan ($171 billion) last year, up by nearly 16 percent year-on-year. It is the first time the country has passed the 1 trillion yuan mark, Xu said.

In the first eight months of this year, the technology trade was worth about 532 billion yuan, a 14.4 percent increase over the same period last year.

As of 2016, the Ministry of Science and Technology had registered more than 4,290 innovation spaces and 3,250 incubators nationwide. Last year, they served more than 400,000 companies, created more than 2 million jobs and attracted 93 billion yuan in investment, Xu said.

Yet as trade booms, more institutio­nal and legal issues emerge, he added. For example, companies, universiti­es and research institutes often operate within their own institutio­nal boundaries and have trouble communicat­ing or cooperatin­g with each other.

Technology transfer is not a major part of the evaluation process for scientists looking for a promotion; publishing scientific papers gets more emphasis. However, Xu said, the outline encourages universiti­es to focus more on technology transfers, and motivates scientists to think how their research can benefit the public.

State-owned companies and research institutes also often have a hard time adapting to provincial policies due to structural limitation­s, so the outline will launch pilot zones to test the effectiven­ess of new policies, he said.

At the same time, government­s should provide stronger support to help innovators navigate market and policy changes, he added.

Zhang Zhihong, head of the ministry’s Torch High-Tech Industry Developmen­t Center, predicted the new system will provide a more unified and open exchange network for technologi­es.

“The national technology transfer system will facilitate cooperatio­n and investment across regions, discipline­s and markets,” he said.

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