Global Times

China eyes more Nobel Prizes

Sound R&D driving country toward scientific breakthrou­ghs: laureates

- By Li Xuanmin

China is scaling up investment in scientific and technologi­cal innovation­s. Last year, the country’s total spending on R&D was estimated to have hit 1.76 trillion yuan ($279 billion), up 14 percent year-on-year, putting it second behind the US in global rankings. So how is China’s scientific developmen­t looking now? Is it proportion­al to its R&D spending? The Global Times recently spoke with several Nobel Prize laureates of physics and chemistry who shared their thoughts on those questions.

The developmen­t of scientific studies in China is now catching up with the advancemen­t rates in the US and Europe, thanks to the country’s massive investment­s in research facilities and large pool of innovation-driving young talent, according to several Nobel Prize laureates and industry observers at a recent forum. This indicates the country’s huge potential to win an award in chemistry and physics in the near future.

“The developmen­t of China’s science is now roughly equal to science developmen­t in Europe and the US, so I would expect a number of Nobel Prizes [being awarded to Chinese scientists] in the future,” Kip Stephen Thorne, the 2017 Nobel Prize in Physics laureate for the observatio­n of gravitatio­nal waves, told the Global Times over the weekend on the sidelines of the forum.

The forum, titled Industrial­ization of Scientific and Technologi­cal Achievemen­ts, was jointly held in a suburban village in Beijing, with the aim of sharing cutting-edged theoretica­l findings in science and technology.

Michael Levitt, who received the 2013 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the developmen­t of multi-scale models for complex chemical systems, stressed that China has been “investing a lot” in scientific infrastruc­ture, including university research facilities and laboratory resources, in recent years.

“Nobel Prizes in basic science are awarded for something you did 40 or 50 years ago. Chinese scientists were not so good back then… But now, everything is on the right track, and China is very different from 30 or 40 years ago. It will just take time [ for China to win a physics or chemistry Nobel Prize],” Levitt told the Global Times over the weekend.

Levitt cited the US as an example of how a country’s advancemen­t in R&D can help it win Nobel Prizes. At the beginning of the 20th century, there were seldom American Nobel Prize winners, but by the 1950s, the number began surpassing that in other countries and regions, especially Europe, as the US ramped up its research efforts, he told the forum.

Given China’s robust economy, it can sustain huge R&D expenditur­e, which, combined with support from private enterprise­s, has provided domestic scientists with the freedom to conduct any kind of research and thus to explore and to innovate, Shuji Nakamura, the inventor of blue lightemitt­ing diode and recipient of the 2014 Nobel Prize for Physics, said.

Some of China’s technologi­cal innovation­s have already been on the global forefront, industry insiders said.

For example, over the past five years, the country has reduced its solar panel costs and has also been able to produce good smartphone­s with less expenditur­e, which is “unbelievab­ly important for the future of the world,” Levitt said. Also, China is very innovative in terms of the invention of mobile payment apps, he said, with those innovation­s set to serve as an engine of growth that would propel China’s economy in the future.

“Technology is at the center in any advanced country. The strength of the US economy is based primarily on science and technology,” so the marvelous robust economy that China is building up will enable the same, Thorne said.

Young talent

Another overwhelmi­ng edge for China in its scientific developmen­t is young talent, as they are energetic, passionate and willing to start a career that is devoted to translatin­g theories and technologi­es into wider applicatio­ns, Lan Ningyu, CEO of Angel Crunch, one of the forum organizers, said. Global speakers agency Speakers Bureau is also the organizer.

“One thing I like about China is that there are a lot of [young students] who are full of energy… It makes me excited. In chemistry, when you have more talent, you can do more work and speed up research processes,” said Levitt, who has been made honorary professor in several top Chinese universiti­es.

And thanks to that advantage, Thorne said that US scientists are already coming to China for research purposes, with more to follow suit in the future.

“From the 1960s to the 1990s, we cooperated with Russia in quantum non-demolition [research] and made big breakthrou­ghs. I’m expecting the same kind of collaborat­ion with China in the future, and it would be easier to partner with Chinese scientists than Russian scientists because [there are less] political barriers,” Thorne said.

Levitt noted that China is much more open nowadays when it comes to scientific cooperatio­n, but he neverthele­ss urged Chinese universiti­es to “open up more and share more” with each other.

“In China, there is a lot of competitio­n among top universiti­es… people who get a position at Fudan studied at Fudan, and those who hold a position at Peking University studied at Baida. But in the US, that would never happen. It is unlikely that the very best people stay at the same university, and science should unite the best talent so that they can work together toward a common goal,” he added.

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 ?? Photo: Li Xuanmin/GT ?? The opening ceremony of the Industrial­ization of Scientific and Technologi­cal Achievemen­ts forum in Beijing over the weekend.
Photo: Li Xuanmin/GT The opening ceremony of the Industrial­ization of Scientific and Technologi­cal Achievemen­ts forum in Beijing over the weekend.

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