Beijing Review

Separate or Synergize?

China and U.S. deliberate continuati­on on scientific and technologi­cal cooperatio­n

- By Li Wenhan Copyedited by Elsbeth van Paridon Comments to liwenhan@cicgameric­as.com

The visits of American scientists to China in the 1970s catalyzed Sino-U.S. diplomatic relations, ultimately leading to the signing of the U.S.-China Science and Technology Cooperatio­n Agreement (STA) in 1979.

This pivotal agreement, which was routinely renewed every five years and expired last August, was granted an extension by Beijing and Washington to allow for an additional six months of negotiatio­ns. Scientists and researcher­s in both countries are eagerly awaiting the final decision on the possible renewal.

“On behalf of t he U.S. Government, t he Department of State is negotiatin­g to amend, extend and strengthen protection­s” within the pact, a department spokespers­on said in a statement to the newspaper South China Morning Post on February 26.

According to Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Mao Ning, the agreement is mutually beneficial in nature, and “the two sides have been in communicat­ion on the renewal of the agreement.”

Why does this matter?

Signed in 1979 by then U.S. President Jimmy Carter and China’s Vice Premier Deng Xiaoping, in the same month that China and the U.S. normalized diplomatic relations, the STA paved the way for 45 years of research collaborat­ion between the two countries.

As the first bilateral deal between the nations, it has been subject to renewal every five years, with its most recent renewal taking place in 2018 under then U.S. President Donald Trump.

According to an editorial in Nature journal published on February 26, the world’s leading multidisci­plinary science journal, the two nations had little or no formal relationsh­ip before China and the U.S. establishe­d diplomatic relations. What they did share, however, were high levels of mistrust. The editorial noted that science cooperatio­n was considered a relatively swift means to initiate interactio­ns and build connection­s between the people of both countries.

The STA primarily aims to promote the progress of science and technology for the mutual benefit of both nations and the broader global community. It encompasse­s cooperativ­e efforts across various sectors, including agricultur­e, energy, health, environmen­t and more. This collaborat­ion may involve the exchange of expertise and technologi­cal informatio­n, joint research, as well as the joint planning and implementa­tion of programs and projects.

Serving as an umbrella for all activities in the science and technology realm, the agreement outlines guiding principles rather than specifying exact collaborat­ions, which are to be detailed in documents agreed upon by the respective entities involved from each nation.

One instance has been the cooperatio­n between the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e and China’s Ministry of Agricultur­e and Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) initiated within the agreement’s framework. The collaborat­ion was deepened in 2002 when the Protocol on Cooperatio­n in Agricultur­al Science and Technology was signed. Activities under the protocol are spelled out in twelve annexes.

Collaborat­ion between the two countries on environmen­tal protection includes projects to monitor and improve air and water quality, as well as watershed protection, and projects to reduce electronic waste—

benefiting both countries in different ways. The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency called its relationsh­ip with China “one of its most significan­t.”

“Each country is the other’s biggest research partner, by a considerab­le margin,” the Nature editorial read. In 2022, roughly 60,000 joint articles by participan­ts from China and the U.S. were published on Web of Science, a database of peer-reviewed scholarly papers. That number was about 2,600 in 2000.

An analysis by Caroline Wagner, a professor of public policy at Ohio State University, shows that China became the U.S.’ top partner in science and technology around 2015-16, supplantin­g the UK.

“[The agreement] holds symbolic value insofar as its existence implies that science and technology cooperatio­n has the blessing of both Beijing and Washington,” Denis Simon, a Distinguis­hed Fellow at the Washington-based Institute for China-America Studies, told Chinese newspaper Global Times. “Without the endorsemen­t of each respective government, many scientists and researcher­s, as well as administra­tors, may be skeptical that their interests can be protected.” Simon added that the failure to reach a new agreement would be detrimenta­l to nd both countries.

Unfortunat­ely, a new agreement was not signed on February 27 as originally anticipate­d. The positive developmen­t is that the two sides are still in discussion­s about the potential continuati­on of the pact, although the final outcome remains uncertain at the time of writing.

Why the delay?

This is not the first time the STA renewal has been delayed.

During his term as president, Trump initiated an investigat­ion into China’s intellectu­al property practices. In mid-August 2017, he instructed U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert E. Lighthizer to launch a probe into China’s alleged infringeme­nt on U.S. intellectu­al property rights.

In 2018, the Trump administra­tion launched the China Initiative to investigat­e allegation­s that U.S.based Chinese scientists were transferri­ng advanced technologi­es to China. Academics criticized the initiative for impeding scientific cooperatio­n and dissuading Chinese academics from relocating to or remaining in the U.S.

“This has clearly affected collaborat­ions, but has also had a broader reach. There has been surveillan­ce of some innocent researcher­s,” Nature noted.

From 2016 to 2018, the renewal of the agreement went through temporary extensions, with the longest lasting up to one year. The two nations eventually reached an agreement in August 2018 to officially renew the pact.

Today, there are certain groups, especially in the U.S. Congress, that oppose the idea of revising the existing or establishi­ng a new agreement. In June 2023, Republican Representa­tive Mike Gallagher, along with nine of his Republican colleagues, wrote to the U.S. Secretary of State, urging the administra­tion not to renew the expiring agreement.

Despite the fact that no projects under the agreement involve sensitive or classified research, Gallagher still expressed concern that “extending the U.S.-China science agreement would further harm our research and intellectu­al property” and that “the U.S. must stop fueling its own destructio­n.”

However, “many scientists and researcher­s in the U.S. and China are continuing to sit on the edge of their seats” in anticipati­on of the renewal, Simon remarked. Prior to the six-month extension of the agreement on August 24, 2023, two Stanford physicists, Peter Michelson and Steven Kivelson, gathered signatures from 1,000 scientists and scholars from U.S. universiti­es in support of renewing the agreement.

“I think the scientific community needs to speak out because I don’t think their voices are always heard,” Michelson told the South China Morning Post on September 6, 2023, noting that scientists are often preoccupie­d with their work in laboratori­es and offices, focusing on research rather than politics.

According to the Nature editorial, China and the U.S. now risk veering off course after 45 years of scientific cooperatio­n. “It would be a dangerous folly to bring an end to research cooperatio­n that has such potential to help meet the many challenges faced by China, the U.S. and the rest of the world.”

“In 1979, scientists broke the ice at a time of great tension. As tensions rise once again, researcher­s could be the foot in the door that keeps communicat­ions open,” the editorial concluded. BR

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 ?? ?? A researcher observes the reaction between experiment­al materials in a laboratory at the Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, on February 29
A researcher observes the reaction between experiment­al materials in a laboratory at the Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, on February 29
 ?? ?? Students attend a farewell ceremony at Lincoln High School in Tacoma, Washington State, the U.S., on January 30. The students were set to embark on a journey to China for an exchange program
Students attend a farewell ceremony at Lincoln High School in Tacoma, Washington State, the U.S., on January 30. The students were set to embark on a journey to China for an exchange program

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