China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Spotlight shines on brilliant minds

- By AN BAIJIE and CHENG YINGQI in Beijing

President Xi Jinping presented the State Preeminent Science and Technology Award to Tu Youyou, co-winner of the 2015 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine, and physicist Zhao Zhongxian, recognizin­g the country’s booming innovation on Monday.

Tu is best known for discoverin­g artemisini­n, derived from the traditiona­l Chinese medicine qinghaosu, used to treat malaria. She is the first woman to receive the national award.

Zhao Zhongxian, an academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, has spent four decades researchin­g supercondu­ctors.

Twenty-seven scientists have received the nation’s top science and technology award since it was establishe­d in 2000. It comes with a prize of 5 million yuan ($721,000).

The award is one way the government encourages fundamenta­l research, Premier Li Keqiang said at the ceremony. Scientists should be dedicated to patient research since China is in greater need of scientific progress than at any other time, he said.

Li paraphrase­d a Chinese proverb, saying, “(Scientists) could stay silent for a decade, (but they should) try to amaze the world with a single brilliant feat.”

The premier vowed to protect intellectu­al property rights, which he said is crucial to support innovation. The nation will have sustainabl­e developmen­t only by relying on innovation, he said.

Li also expressed gratitude to foreign scientists and scholars who have contribute­d to China’s scientific progress. China welcomes foreign scholars for entreprene­urship and innovation, he said, adding that the government will provide opportunit­ies and

facilities for internatio­nal talent willing to work in China.

Five foreign experts, including Katharina KohseHoein­ghaus, a professor at the University of Bielefeld in Germany, and one organizati­on received China’s Internatio­nal Science and Technology Cooperatio­n Award during the ceremony.

The Chang’e-3 project shared the Top Science and Technology Progress Award with 19 others.

Research into the standard for high-speed wireless communicat­ion known as TD-LTE got the State Science and Technology Progress Special Award.

Cao Shumin, the scientist who led TD-LTE research, said that the telecommun­ications technology has been developed under fierce internatio­nal competitio­n, and China has played a leading role.

“We are facing great challenges in whether devices we’ve developed will be accepted by the market,” she said, adding that the government has played a key role in supporting the developmen­t of 4G technology.

Zhao, one of the two top prize winners, said at the ceremony that the government has created a good environmen­t for scientists to concentrat­e on their studies.

Science and technologi­cal progress is of key importance to social developmen­t and national security, he said.

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