Global Times

Institute denies doing military-based work

China has ‘right to use facilities for scientific research in S.China Sea’

- By Li Sikun and Deng Xiaoci

The Chinese Academy of Sciences’ (CAS) oceanology institute on Tuesday denied reports of leading military-oriented underwater surveillan­ce in the South China Sea.

The Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post (SCMP) on Monday reported that China’s new hi-tech underwater surveillan­ce network system project, which gathers underwater data, particular­ly water temperatur­e and salinity, could help the navy more accurately lock in on targets and improve navigation and positionin­g.

The report said that the project, led by the institute, is allegedly part of an “unpreceden­ted military expansion to challenge the US in the world’s oceans.”

A South China Sea Institute of Oceanology employee told the Global Times that the institute is not aware of any system mentioned in the SCMP report and that the institute had never posted informatio­n on any military use network on its official website.

The only maritime environmen­t system the institute involved in is scientific research in nature, according to the employee.

“China has never placed any surveillan­ce facilities in the South China Sea,” Chen Xiangmiao, a research fellow at the National Institute for the South China Sea, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

“There’s no need to do so and such a project costs a lot,” Chen said.

However, it is totally legitimate for China to place facilities in the region for scientific research, such as monitoring the hydrologic­al or climate changes in the waters, Chen added.

In May 2017, China approved a plan to build an underwater observatio­n network in the East China Sea and the South China Sea.

China will invest 2 billion yuan ($292 million) to build the network, which will be capable of all-weather and real-time HD multi-interface observatio­n from seabed to surface, China Central Television reported in May.

“Military use is only one part of the planned use of the system, but civilian uses will have a much wider and diversifie­d scope in the future,” Liu Jiangping, a military analyst, told the Global Times previously.

“Foreign countries should not make a scene of China’s legitimate developmen­t in the South China Sea region, as the country will not stop its efforts to improve oceanic research and these efforts could also contribute to innovation­s in oceanic technology and research,” Chen explained.

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