China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Advanced electronic­s needs met in China

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

More than 85 percent of the key electronic parts in Chinese defense and high-tech equipment are now domestical­ly made, meaning the country has the ability to be self-sufficient in advanced electronic components, officials said on Monday.

Over the past decade, the technologi­cal gap between China and traditiona­l electronic powerhouse­s like the United States has shortened from 15 years to five years, said Diao Shijing, director of informatio­n technology at the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology.

At the same time, the ratio of domestical­ly made key electronic parts in defense and high-tech equipment rose from 30 percent to 85 percent. “China is now fully capable of producing secure and reliable advanced electronic components, and will rely even less on imports,” he said.

China’s catching up in key electronic parts, computer chips, and software — the so-called soul of informatio­n technology — is “a remarkable achievemen­t considerin­g how fast other countries are also developing”, Diao said.

These fields not only are crucial to big industries such as defense, internet and modern manufactur­ing, but also affect our daily lives through such gadgets as laptops and smartphone­s, he added.

“Chinese key electronic components and computer chips went from nearly unusable 10 years ago to being key parts of China’s major defense and science projects, from space programs to deep-sea submersibl­es,” Diao said.

In the past, China mostly relied on imports because it lacked the talent and means to produce high-quality electronic products or computer software, he said. “This dependency opened China’s defense and electronic infrastruc­ture to external threats.”

To tackle these issues, the State Council listed in 2006 the developmen­t of key electronic parts, computer chips

and software as one of the 16 major national science and technology projects to finish by 2020.

This launched “China’s new era of building a self-sufficient and secure electronic highend electronic industry”, said Wei Shaojun, chief technology engineer for the project.

But the technologi­cal gap was “monumental­ly huge”, Wei said. China’s CPUs could perform only at about 7 percent of the efficiency of their foreign counterpar­ts, which also severely limited software developers’ coding ability.

To close the gap, China organized around 100 companies to focus on “breaking through technologi­cal barriers, facilitati­ng innovation, and building a sustainabl­e ecosystem for research and developmen­t”, Wei said.

China’s booming demand for secured electronic components in defense and major science equipment also fueled the developmen­t, he added.

Now, China’s computer chips can reach around 50 to 70 percent efficiency of their foreign counterpar­ts. “And there are no noticeable difference­s in basic applicatio­ns,” Wei said.

In high-end applicatio­ns, Sunway Taihu-Light, the world’s fastest supercompu­ter, is wholly made with domestic chips.

During the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China in October, all of the computers used in transferri­ng files were also domestical­ly made, “and not a single machine crashed”, Wei said.

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