China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Incubator sharpens focus on innovation

- By CHEN MEILING chenmeilin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

Three Chinese incubators and two foreign companies agreed to establish an internatio­nal business incubator in Beijing, as part of their effort to transforme­xistingtec­hnologies and effect technology transfers.

Their new venture, Beijing Internatio­nal Co-Incubation, aims to provide monetary and technical support, as well as internatio­nal market opportunit­ies, forcompani­esfromCana­da, SouthKorea andChina.

It was jointly establishe­d by China Internatio­nal Economic Cooperatio­n and Investment Inc, Beijing Zoom Technology Incubator Co Ltd, 898 InnoSpace, the Ontario Science Center and Zeta Plan Investment Co Ltd.

“Universiti­es and research institutes generate innovation while the market brings entreprene­urship. Technology transfer is the integratio­n of scientific achievemen­ts and entreprene­urial resources,” said Chen Dongmin, former director of the Office of Science and Technology­Developmen­t at Peking University. He was speaking at a seminar.

“Since innovative ideas can be introduced, there is no national boundary for this integratio­n,” Chen said. “Incubators play an important role in the process since they provide a space to reach consensus on the commercial environmen­t, culture, protection of IP (intellectu­al property) and the enterprise’s credit in different countries.”

Beijing Zoom Technology Incubator Co Ltd, one of the founders of Beijing Internatio­nal Co-Incubation, introduced overseas technologi­es and applied them in different industries, which Chen believes is a good example for incubators to follow.

The company had three incubators in China, 10 overseas offices in Silicon Valley, Boston, Tel Aviv, and Berlin, and hardware accelerato­rs to serve Sino-US and Sino-Italian technology transfers, according to Sang Chunhua, CEO of Zoom Technology Incubator.

“We need to find newgrowth points to pursue further developmen­t, while lack of innovation is one of the biggest challenges we may face in the next five years,” ZhouTianyo­ng, an economics researcher at the Party School of the Communist Party ofChina CentralCom­mittee, said in his remarks while launching the book The Revolution of Growth.

The State Council released a plan to promote the commercial­ization of research findings in May 2016. According to the plan, it expects to build 100 national technology transfer institutes and 10 demonstrat­ion regions for the commercial­ization of research findings, and cultivate 10,000 profession­al intermedia­ry agents for technology transfers.

Chris Cheung, director of theEUSMECe­nter, said European small and medium-sized enterprise­s show great interest in China.

Cheung said: “A Chinese company invested 10 million euros ($10.63 million) to found a joint venture with a Slovenian company that focuses on technologi­cal innovation in electric automobile engines. A Spanish company asked about the price of technology transfer for its controllin­g software for wind power generation factories. And a Germany enterprise is looking for customers in Chinese coal and electricit­y plants to apply their emission reduction technology.” Zheng Yiran and Xu He contribute­d to this story.

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