China Daily (Hong Kong)

Big money aimed at top universiti­es

Govt investment of 110b yuan to help put China in top talent, quality echelon

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO in Hangzhou zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

China will devote more resources to reforming its manufactur­ing sector with new, innovative technologi­es, while improving the higher education system’s ability to produce quality talent capable of original, groundbrea­king work, officials said on Saturday.

China will invest around 110 billion yuan ($17.2 billion) by 2020 to help the country’s top 42 universiti­es become first-class institutio­ns, while creating 137 universiti­es with first-class standing in specific fields, Yang Wei, former director of the National Natural Science Foundation of China, said during a panel discussion at the 20th annual meeting of the China Associatio­n of Science and Technology in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, which opened on Saturday.

During the opening ceremony, Zhou Ji, president of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, said high-quality talent can promote greater use of new technologi­es in China’s manufactur­ing sector and help turn China into a world-class manufactur­ing powerhouse by 2035.

Wan Gang, president of the associatio­n, said China needs to become self-sufficient in the core technologi­es of advanced scientific fields, including space, telecommun­ications, medical equipment and robotics.

“Without a strong ability to innovate, our industries are stuck producing mid- to lowtier products,” Wan said. “This is a hurdle that we must overcome if China wants to become an innovative nation and a world-class science and technology powerhouse.”

Minister of Science and Technology Wang Zhigang said China is blazing a new developmen­t path centered on creating high-quality talent and technologi­es to lead industrial and economic growth.

Wang said the four main challenges for China’s scientific and technologi­cal innovation are the inability to solve key problems in core technologi­es; a lack of research direction in frontier sciences; a lack of mechanisms to organize innovation resources from companies and the public sector; and a lack of globally influentia­l industrial standards set by China.

Therefore, the government needs to provide consistent and lasting strategic planning, policy and legal services for science workers; help nurture influentia­l scientists and world-class research institutio­ns; and create a favorable institutio­nal and social environmen­t for thought and

Wang said.

At the same time, more resources will be devoted to technologi­es that can help reform China’s manufactur­ing industries and improve people’s livelihood­s, such as artificial intelligen­ce, robotics, big data, cloud computing, clean energy, biology and medicine, he said.

This year marks the 40th anniversar­y of China’s reform and opening-up, as well as the 60th anniversar­y of the China Associatio­n of Science and Technology. More than 2,500 participan­ts from 26 countries and regions joined the associatio­n’s annual meeting this year.

Stephen Welby, president of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic­s Engineerin­g, an internatio­nal science organizati­on, said: “Chinese scientists have been essential in creating many technologi­es that we have taken for granted.

“The Chinese Academy of Sciences, as well as other Chinese research institutio­ns, have been a driving force for significan­t technologi­cal advancemen­t in the world. These achievemen­ts will continue to expand our understand­ing of technologi­es and how to use them for the benefit of humanity.”

Jack Ma, founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba, said it is crucial to pay attention and invest in fundamenta­l science and its applicatio­ns. He said artificial intelligen­ce, the internet of things and blockchain­s are the three technologi­es that will change the world in the next two decades.

“Profits for future companies will not come from their size and scale but their ability to innovate on fundamenta­l levels,” he said. scientific innovation,

Without a strong ability to innovate, our industries are stuck producing mid- to low-tier products.”

Wan Gang,

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