China Daily

Complement­ary research will help accelerate smoother integratio­n

- By HE SHUSI in Hong Kong heshusi@chinadaily­hk.com

Greater collaborat­ion with the mainland would boost Hong Kong’s advantages in scientific research and further integrate the city in China’s developmen­t of innovation and technology, according to a leading neuroscien­tist in the city.

Nancy Ip Yuk-yu, a member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said closer cooperatio­n with mainland scientists could allow experts from Hong Kong to take leading roles in a number of national scientific research projects, rather than simply participat­ing in them.

If Hong Kong’s scientists could lead national projects while using their internatio­nal ties and advantages in certain fields, the city would become a more attractive destinatio­n for related talent, she added, noting that talent is a crucial factor in the developmen­t of science and technology.

Ip made her remarks after President Xi Jinping called for greater cooperatio­n in science and technology between Hong Kong and the mainland.

Xi was responding to a letter written to him by 24 academicia­ns at CAS and the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g in June last year.

The writers, all based in Hong Kong, appealed for national research funds to be used in the city, and called for favorable policies on the export of scientific research equipment to the mainland.

Ip, one of the authors of the letter, was delighted by the central government’s response and its support for Hong Kong’s scientific developmen­t.

Complement­ary developmen­t through collaborat­ion plays a vital part in scientific research, which is why the mainland and the city should strive for more exchanges and cooperatio­n, she added.

According to Ip, the Ministry of Science and Technology allocated 1 million yuan ($157,400) in national scientific research funds to each of the 16 Partner State Key Laboratori­es and six branches of the Chinese National Engineerin­g Research Center in Hong Kong — 22 million yuan in total — in the wake of the letter.

Allowing national scientific research funds to be used in the city is a “historic breakthrou­gh” for Hong Kong’s scientists, and an “important first step” in their integratio­n in national developmen­ts in innovation and technology, she added.

She expressed the hope that the funds could be allocated to scientists in Hong Kong outside the 22 institutio­ns in the near future, and that more scientific resources in the mainland could be shared with the city under special national policies — including patient samples and access to specialist machinery that Hong Kong lacks.

As a neuroscien­tist, she called for related industries to be more involved in scientific research to help industrial­ize research findings.

Ip noted that the developmen­t of the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area into an internatio­nal innovation and technology hub is at the core of the national strategy.

She hoped the developmen­t of the Bay Area would further improve cooperatio­n between Hong Kong and the mainland, which would help make full use of scientific research talent and funding on both sides and raise scientific developmen­t to a higher level.

 ?? PARKER ZHENG / CHINA DAILY ?? Nancy Ip Yuk-yu believes closer relations will help Hong Kong’s scientists take lead roles in projects.
PARKER ZHENG / CHINA DAILY Nancy Ip Yuk-yu believes closer relations will help Hong Kong’s scientists take lead roles in projects.

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