China Daily

Commercial­ization of science picks up

Report says number of contracts in 2019 rose 32.3 percent year-on-year

- By ZHANG YANGFEI zhangyangf­ei@chinadaily.com.cn

A recent report on China’s commercial­ization of scientific and technologi­cal achievemen­ts shows continuous endeavors by Chinese academic institutes to industrial­ize the fruits of their research.

The annual report’s 2020 edition, looking back at achievemen­ts in 2019, was compiled by the National Center for Science and Technology Evaluation, the Institute of Scientific and Technical Informatio­n of China and a research council for China’s science and technology achievemen­t management under the guidance of the Ministry of Science and Technology.

It collected data from 3,450 universiti­es and research institutes and analyzed the progress as well as the problems in transformi­ng scientific results.

The report said the academies signed 15,035 contracts to commercial­ize their research findings in the form of technology transfer, licensing and investment in 2019 — up 32.3 percent year-on-year — that were worth 15.2 billion yuan ($2.33 billion).

It also said 10 percent of contracts were worth more than 1 million yuan, with 29 each worth more than 100 million yuan.

The latest report included a new feature showing what industries, enterprise­s and geographic­al areas had scientific results, indicating the close connection between research and economic activity. Shanghai, Beijing and Guangdong province were the three main suppliers of scientific achievemen­ts.

Commercial­ization of scientific achievemen­ts is an important part of the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25), which was adopted last month and calls for stronger protection of intellectu­al property rights and significan­t improvemen­ts in the effectiven­ess of commercial­izing scientific results.

In 2015, national legislator­s amended the Law on Promoting the Transforma­tion of Scientific and Technologi­cal Achievemen­ts, and in 2016 the central government issued regulation­s and an action plan to promote science commercial­ization, forming a “three-step” systematic arrangemen­t to boost activity.

Its preferenti­al policies explain the rapid surge of science commercial­ization activities from 2016 to 2019, said Han Jun, deputy chief evaluator of the National Center for Science and Technology Evaluation.

However, the new report said that while the number of contracts rose, the total value dropped by 19.1 percent, leading to a decline in cash and equity awards received by individual researcher­s.

Han said that was because outputs from high-value scientific achievemen­ts require time and are uncertain. The policy helped clear the stock of scientific findings and current research needs time to produce results.

Huang Canhong, deputy director of the center, said the data also showed some positive trends, including closer cooperatio­n between industries and academia and improved science commercial­ization services. In 2019, the number of platforms offering such services was 10,770, a year-on-year increase of 27.2 percent.

However, some problems still need to be fixed. The report said there is still a shortage of platforms and talent offering technology transfer services and a scientific and reasonable science evaluation mechanism is needed to prevent researcher­s rushing to declare patents on low-quality, low-value scientific findings.

Chen Hongsheng, an official from the ministry’s department of research commercial­ization and regional innovation, said science commercial­ization is a long-term task.

He said that based on new requiremen­ts in the 14th Five-Year Plan, the ministry will strive to advance scientific self-reliance, enhance the nation’s ability to commercial­ize high-quality scientific results, improve commercial­ization services by establishi­ng a high-level profession­al team and actively explore ways to promote science industrial­ization through financial means such as angel investment, venture capital, intellectu­al property rights and technologi­cal insurance.

“The ministry is discussing with the Ministry of Finance how to deepen reform of the science and technology mechanism to make it more conducive to science commercial­ization,” Chen added.

The ministry is discussing with the Ministry of Finance how to deepen reform of the science and technology mechanism to make it more conducive to science commercial­ization.”

Chen Hongsheng, an official from the Ministry of Science and Technology

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