Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

China is investing in emerging tech. India needs to catch up, soon

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In the backdrop of China’s trade and technology rivalry with the United States (US), President Xi Jinping summoned leaders of China’s artificial intelligen­ce (AI) and strategic industries to a meeting on July 21, and asked them to align their business strategies with China’s needs in the greater interest of the country.

After Xi unveiled his ambition of making China a world leader in emerging technologi­es in 2013, the government has poured billions of dollars to develop commercial and military applicatio­ns of AI, 5G, new materials, energy platforms, quantum computing and financial technologi­es. Its progress has been aided by its civil-military fusion policy, under which ministries and armed forces work together with Stateowned and private companies, with the State directing resources in priority areas, without any competitio­n from foreign companies. Several experts say that China has made progress in domains such as smart cities, smart manufactur­ing, surveillan­ce, semi-autonomous vehicles and hypersonic weapons. In e-commerce, financial technologi­es, new energy platforms, China is viewed as a world leader. In June, China launched its final satellite to complete its Baidou navigation system, thus becoming a true space power. According to a study by the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies (2018), China is trying to integrate AI and big data into unmanned aerial vehicles, drone swarms and cyber systems in order to achieve “brain supremacy” (ability to damage cognition of the enemy).

Huawei’s emergence as the largest telecom equipment maker and second-largest vendor of smartphone­s in the world is well known. China has also emerged as the largest manufactur­er and exporter of electric vehicles, batteries and solar panels. It accounts for 70% of commercial dronemanuf­acturing and has developed variants of the US’s MQ-1 Predator drones.

Though China has excelled in many areas, it is still dependent on foreign companies for cutting-edge technologi­es. Huawei’s reigning supremacy may well end as the US sanctions on the supply of microchip

Kirin (system on chip) start kicking in. Despite huge investment­s over the last 30 years, China remains dependent on American, South Korean and Taiwanese companies for the supply of microchips and semiconduc­tors which are a prerequisi­te in the AI industry. Similarly, China’s record in making its own engine for long-range aircraft is disappoint­ing. Its homemade WS-15 engine for J-20 stealth fighter aircraft exploded in a ground running test in 2015, and it has started manufactur­ing the J-20 using the old Russian AL-31 engine, which lacks the thrust vector control necessary for a 5th generation aircraft. Ditto, its inability to make highgrade carbon for its stealth aircraft or miniaturis­e the nuclear reactor for its aircraft carriers.

In many instances, China has acquired advanced technologi­es from the West by forcing its companies to part with them in exchange for market access or by stealing and copying foreign designs. A basic lacuna in this approach is low expenditur­e in basic sciences and fundamenta­l research, which has remained 5% of its overall research and developmen­t expenditur­e (as against 25-30% in developed countries) and shortage of skilled personnel. Also, the environmen­t for innovation has deteriorat­ed with authoritar­ian policies being pursued by the Xi regime, which is damaging global chains, essential for research and collaborat­ion.

India has taken some incipient steps to induct AI into civilian and military domains by establishi­ng policy framework and promoting research and applicatio­ns with collaborat­ion among defence establishm­ents and industry. In some cases, drones, smart weaponry and other hi-tech military equipment have been imported from the US, Russia, France and Israel. There is urgent need to prioritise the resources in developmen­t of AI platforms to ensure that India does not fall behind more in relative power matrix with China.

Yogesh Gupta is a former ambassador who writes on China-related issues The views expressed are personal

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