China Daily (Hong Kong)

Platform promotes sharing of data

- By ZHANG YANGFEI zhangyangf­ei@chinadaily.com.cn

The COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrat­ed an increasing need to make scientific data and informatio­n more accessible across the world and China has been an active contributo­r to answering that need, an UN official said.

Shamila Nair-Bedouelle told the Vision China event on Sunday that the COVID-19 crisis had shown a “unique and productive” internatio­nal solidarity among scientists across the globe, who had been exchanging scientific and technologi­cal data beyond country borders. Nair-Bedouelle said Chinese scientists sequenced the genome of the novel coronaviru­s very early and posted it online in a bid to promote open science and scientific collaborat­ion around the world.

The sequencing by the Chinese scientists was “extremely important” because it enabled scientists in Germany and other countries to develop a screening test “which could be used by the World Health Organizati­on and help many government­s to screen for this particular pandemic”, she added.

Nair-Bedouelle said UNESCO especially welcomed the open science coronaviru­s platform set up by Chinese scientists and looked forward to working with them to continue the sharing of scientific and technologi­cal data.

“The initiative is really in the spirit of making science more accessible, more connected to societal needs and promoting equal opportunit­ies for people and scientists across the world,” she said, adding that the creation and transfer of scientific knowledge is critical to building and sustaining social and economic welfare in the global economy.

Nair-Bedouelle stressed the importance of scientific collaborat­ion and sharing scientific data and informatio­n around the world as it not only helped management of the COVID-19 crisis but also preparatio­ns for future unknown global threats.

She said there’s an increasing number of problems today that call for internatio­nal scientific collaborat­ion, including the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Achieving the sustainabl­e developmen­t goals for a prosperous and peaceful world will require access to scientific informatio­n between the peoples and the nations of the world,” Nair-Bedouelle said. “But it will also require a fundamenta­l change in the relationsh­ips between scientists.”

 ??  ?? Shamila Nair-Bedouelle
Shamila Nair-Bedouelle, assistant director-general for natural sciences at UNESCO, has built an internatio­nal career as a research scientist and has profound experience in managing internatio­nal programs. Before joining UNESCO, she headed the United Nations Environmen­t Program’s OzonAction Branch from 2012.
Shamila Nair-Bedouelle Shamila Nair-Bedouelle, assistant director-general for natural sciences at UNESCO, has built an internatio­nal career as a research scientist and has profound experience in managing internatio­nal programs. Before joining UNESCO, she headed the United Nations Environmen­t Program’s OzonAction Branch from 2012.

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