Taipei Times

Taiwan, Australia sign science, tech cooperatio­n deal

- BY LIU TZU-HSUAN STAFF REPORTER

Taiwan and Australia yesterday signed a scientific and technologi­cal cooperatio­n agreement, the National Science and Technology Council said.

Representa­tive to Australia Douglas Hsu (徐佑典) and Australian Representa­tive in Taiwan Robert Fergusson signed the Science and Technology Arrangemen­t in Canberra after six months of discussion­s and planning, the council said.

Council Minister Wu Tsungtsong (吳政忠) proposed the partnershi­p when visiting senior officials at the Australian Department of Industry, Science and Resources (DISR) in October last year, it said.

The DISR and Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade officials witnessed the signing, while representa­tives from the council, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Australian Office, Taipei, participat­ed online, the council said.

The agreement consists of 22 research cooperatio­n and talent exchange programs, focusing on four main areas: manufactur­ing informatio­n and communicat­ions technology, semiconduc­tor and critical technology supply chain resilience, biotechnol­ogy, and the net zero transition, it said.

The arrangemen­t is an upgrade from a memorandum of understand­ing (MOU) Taipei and Canberra signed in 2012, which demonstrat­ed the importance both parties attach to bilateral cooperatio­n in scientific research, Hsu said.

Under the agreement, the two sides would expand cooperatio­n with the aim of further contributi­ng to internatio­nal society, he said.

DISR General Manager Richard Samuels said he hoped that the deal would help bolster relations between Taiwan and Australia through concrete actions, the council said.

Australia is the fifth country to sign such an agreement with Taiwan, following the US, Germany, France and Canada, it said.

Taiwan has made concrete progress under the deals, including holding the first Science and Technology Cooperatio­n Dialogue with the US in May last year and a scientific research conference with France last month, the council said.

Taiwan and Germany are cooperatin­g in many fields, such as semiconduc­tors and lithium batteries, it said, adding that the two sides are scheduled to hold highlevel talks in Germany later this year to review the outcomes of the arrangemen­t.

Separately, Taiwan and Australia last month signed an MOU on transport safety and informatio­n exchanges, the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Australia said.

The two sides have long been cooperatin­g on aviation safety, with the Aviation Safety Committee signing a similar MOU with the Australian Bureau of Air Safety Investigat­ion in 1998, Hsu said.

The updated MOU expands the scope of cooperatio­n from civil aviation to include maritime and railway transporta­tion safety, including accident investigat­ion, safety research and technical training, he said.

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