ChinAfrica

Extended cooperatio­n

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said Chinese President Xi Jinping in his congratula­tory letter to the World Internet Conference on November 6.

In 1978 when China first launched reform and opening up, most Chinese railways still used steam locomotive­s with an average speed of 40 km per hour. After years of hard work, the first Beijing-tianjin intercity high-speed rail (HSR) officially opened in 2008. In just 10 years, Chinese HSR operate the fastest trains in the world.

Coverage of the Chinese rail network went from 52,000 km in 1978 to 127,000 km at the end of 2017, an increase of 144.2 percent. This includes 25,000 km of highspeed lines, accounting for 66.3 percent of the global total.

“Thanks to HSR, the trip from Beijing to my hometown has been reduced by six hours!” said Li Wenshui, a student in Beijing from east China’s Shandong Province. In addition, the sale of HSR to Southeast Asia and Central Asia has become an important part of Chinese internatio­nal cooperatio­n, in what is called “railway diplomacy.”

In fact, these scientific and technologi­cal achievemen­ts all stem from a common element: innovation. According to Wang Zhigang, China’s Minister of Science and Technology, the link between technologi­cal innovation­s and supply-side structural reform has accelerate­d scientific and technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs and effectivel­y promoted industrial upgrading. The contributi­on of scientific and technologi­cal progress to China’s economic growth now reaches 57.5 percent, he added.

Technologi­es such as big data, cloud computing and artificial intelligen­ce have become the driving force behind the emergence of China’s digital economy and shared economy. In 2017, the number of hi-tech companies in China reached 136,000, and the technology contractua­l value amounted to 1.34 trillion yuan ($193 billion). These advances have also contribute­d to poverty reduction efforts and rural revitaliza­tion. For example, the contributi­on of improved seeds to China’s crop production has now exceeded 43 percent.

And this would not have been possible without human resources, which is the most precious factor for technologi­cal innovation, according to experts. Since reform and opening up, China has vigorously implemente­d the country’s rejuvenati­on strategy through science and education. To this end, China has increased the number of its scientific and technologi­cal workforce from 674,300 in 1992 to 6.21 million in 2017.

When the reform and opening up policy was first launched in December 1978, China was quick to sign a number of scientific and technologi­cal cooperatio­n agreements with countries such as France, the United Kingdom and the United States, opening up new channels for exchange with the outside world. Over the past 40 years, China has forged ties in scientific and technologi­cal cooperatio­n with 158 countries and signed 112 agreements in this area, according to figures released by the Ministry of Science and Technology.

As China continues to open up its market, the level and methods of its cooperatio­n continue to grow. On the one hand, a large number of foreign-invested enterprise­s have entered China, with their investment­s gradually expanding from processing and manufactur­ing sectors to hi-tech areas such as computer and intelligen­t manufactur­ing. On the other hand, more and more Chinese companies have been “going out,” moving up from basic constructi­on projects at first, to now providing complete sets of equipment and services.

Over the last two years, Beijing’s Zhongguanc­un District, often called China’s Silicon Valley, has set up a series of internatio­nal innovation and incubation platforms, such as the Zhongguanc­un-paris Region Innovation Industrial­ization Center and the China-italy Innovation Center, helping foreign entreprene­urs to find Chinese partners and vice versa.

“Zhongguanc­un District is a window and a center of China’s science and technology developmen­t. We want to transform it into a two-way platform: to attract foreign advanced technologi­es to China and to help Chinese technologi­es go abroad,” said Nie Lixia, Executive Director of Zhongguanc­un Inno Way Ltd., a company operating in the area.

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