China Daily (Hong Kong)

Innovation-driven developmen­t strategy puts country into Top 20

- By ZHANG YANGFEI zhangyangf­ei@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s innovation-driven developmen­t strategy has put down strong roots and has a promising future with the guidance and support of the central government, experts said.

Gan Yong, former vice-president of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, told CPPCC Daily that he had seen many scientific breakthrou­ghs over the last six years and had high expectatio­ns for the future of technologi­cal developmen­t.

In March 2013, Gan had a chance to meet President Xi Jinping and voice his opinions in a science and technology panel discussion during the annual meeting of the 12th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, the country’s top political advisory body.

Gan said China’s strengths in core technology research were too widely dispersed, and he urged the establishm­ent of a generic research and developmen­t platform to pool the advantages and boost China’s internatio­nal competitiv­eness.

He said he believed optoelectr­onic devices and other microproce­ssors would be among the most competitiv­e areas internatio­nally, with artificial intelligen­ce being the key technologi­cal trend.

Xi has always attached great importance to scientific innovation and has repeatedly urged academic institutio­ns and enterprise­s to be committed to innovation­driven developmen­t, Gan said.

In his keynote speech at the panel discussion, Xi described the innovation-driven developmen­t strategy as a fundamenta­l measure to accelerate and invigorate the country’s economic transforma­tion, and said China must plan ahead and be bold in exploring some key areas of science and technology.

Three years after that speech, the State Council released an outline for China’s innovation-driven developmen­t, underlinin­g the crucial role of advancing mass innovation and entreprene­urship and pledging that China will become an “innovation country” by 2020 and a global “innovation leader” by 2030.

In 2017, the government released another guideline that aimed to add momentum to mass innovation and entreprene­urship. The China Associatio­n for Science and Technology released a similar guideline designed to strengthen the implementa­tion of the innovation-driven developmen­t strategy.

The country’s commitment to innovation has already led to a number of scientific achievemen­ts, such as the world’s first quantum communicat­ions satellite, Micius, which was launched in 2016, and the completion of one of the world’s most powerful supercompu­ters, Sunway TaihuLight.

The Global Innovation Index 2018 — published by Cornell University together with the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on and INSEAD, a business graduate school — listed China among the world’s 20 most-innovative economies. It ranked 17th, up from 22nd in 2017.

The rise “represents a breakthrou­gh for an economy witnessing rapid transforma­tion and guided by government policy prioritizi­ng research and developmen­t-intensive ingenuity”, WIPO said in a news release.

Wan Jianmin, an academicia­n of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g and vice-president of the Chinese Academy of Agricultur­al Sciences, also attended the panel discussion in 2013.

Six years on, Wan said he has been pleased to see breakthrou­ghs in basic agricultur­al research and modern breeding techniques. For instance, geneticall­y modified insect-resistant cotton created by innovative scientists, has been more widely applied and helped reduce the use of pesticides by more than 900,000 metric tons.

New varieties of disease-resistant corn, wheat and rice have greatly reduced the annual use of pesticides and improved efficiency in water use, Wan said.

Wan said he expects Xi’s 2013 speech, which also stressed the roles of enterprise­s and building an organic chain that better links innovation, industry and market demand, will bear more fruit.

“Now it is mainly the government that invests in agricultur­al science and technology innovation, because agricultur­e is not considered a profitable industry and progress comes slowly. So enterprise­s are less motivated,” Wan said. “I hope the authoritie­s at all levels will continue to implement what Xi said in the speech and invest more in the cuttingedg­e technologi­es of agricultur­al science.”

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