1 / 11

Discussions on Innovation Opportunities in China

Explore the thirst for innovation in China and the country's goal to become innovation-driven. Learn about targets, plans, and opportunities for collaborative and indigenous innovation.

Download Presentation

Discussions on Innovation Opportunities in China

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Discussions on Innovation Opportunities in China Quan Bo First Secretary, Science and Technology Office Chinese Embassy in the Netherlands quanb@most.cn 30 May 2012

  2. 1. Why Is China Thirsty for Innovation? - Most of conventional and less sophisticated technologies have been imported and used. - “World Workshop” equipped with above can no longer sustained the China’s economy. - Higher labor cost, stricter regulation, etc. in China facilitate transfer of traditional manufacturing industry to other developing countries. - Demographic momentum is lost. The focus is life quality.

  3. 2. Goal, Targets and Plan • 2.1 Goal • A national innovation system will be in its initial form clear in functions, rational in structure, good in interaction, and efficient in performance, to turn the nation into an innovation-driven one. • 2.2 Some targets for S & T development by 2015 • R & D % in GDP: from current 1.75 to 2.2 ($111.2 billion for 2010) • R & D human input per 1,000 employed persons: from 3.3 to 4.3; • World ranking of citation of international science paper: from No. 8 to No. 5; • No. of invention patents per 1,000 persons: from 0.17 to 0.33; • % of added value from high-tech industry in the added value of manufacturing industry: from 13 to 17; and • % of citizens of essential science qualifications: from 3.27 to 5.

  4. 2.3 Plan for development of new industries • Energy-saving and environment protection; • New generation of information technology; • Bio-industry; • Manufacturing of high end equipment; • New energy; • New material; and • New energy powered automobile. • China seems interested in everything.

  5. 3. Collaborative Innovation or Indigenous Innovation? • 3.1 Collaborative innovation is the main stream • For the past 170 years, China has been a student to learn Western or modern science and technology; • the country is beginning to build an innovation-driven society, and will not materialize it without cooperation with other countries; and • no country is able to conduct a door-closing innovation strategy now. • 3.2 Indigenous innovation is an important ingredient of China’s national innovation strategy • Current high reliance on technology input from developed countries; • No country can be advanced without indigenous innovation, especially for China;

  6. Core technology or core competitiveness can not be sold, and China has not yet been permitted to buy so-called sensitive technologies from Western countries; and • China is contributing more and more knowledge and know-how to the world through conducting indigenous innovation. • 3.3 Recent example: R & D areas for concentrated efforts in the 11th 5-year Plan period: • Core electronic devices and high end general chips and basic software products; • Manufacturing equipment and complete sets of process for super scale integrated circuit; • New generation of wireless broadband movable communication network; • Advanced digital controlled machine tool and basic manufacturing equipment;

  7. Development of large scale oil/gas field and coal bed gas; • Nuclear power station with advanced large water pressure reactor and high temperature and gas cooling reactor; • Control and treatment of pollution in water bodies; • Culture of new GM biologic varieties; • Invention of major new medicine; • Prevention of AIDS, virus hepatitis and other infectious diseases; and • Large airplane manufacturing. • 3.4 Examples of breakthroughs: manned spacecraft, super computer, high-speed train, stem cell, etc.

  8. 4. Is China Available for Building an Innovation-driven Society? • 4.1 Positive aspects • - Basic resources available: $74.8 trillion for 2011; R & D annually increased at 20% in recent years; a huge pool of human resources, etc. • Social consensus: China must invent and be innovative. • Huge capital stock: investment, not exports, leads China’s economy. It invested 48% of its GDP in plant, buildings, machinery and infrastructure in 2011. • China’s economy is being merged itself into the world innovation network, i.g. multinationals have opened 3,500 research institutions mainly in Shanghai and Beijing. Philips research center in Shanghai has 2,000 researchers. • More open for open and collaborative innovation.

  9. 4.2 Negative aspects • Short of institutions to train, keep and attract talents, to innovate and respect innovations, to use its innovation resources efficiently, etc. • Arguable: culturally, Chinese people are lack of systematic thinking? Few in China could tell how to innovate in an industry or value chain manner.

  10. 5. Opportunities? • 5.1 Europe’s strategic thinking: urgency to cooperate with China in innovation • “Europe must act urgently now to ‘lock in’ much greater science and technology-led business collaboration with China” (Dirk Jan van den Berg, Oct 2010) • 5.2 Needs from China’s macro economy: the country has to produce much more for its own people. • Growth area? Urbanization. Investment per square meter in a China town is much lower than a Dutch one. • 5.3 Work with any of the players: Chinese and foreign research institutions, foreign companies in China, and Chinese companies in Europe. • 5.4 Join in bilateral and Chinese domestic innovation programs.

  11. Reference information can be provided upon inquiry • Such as: • China’s science and technology system. • China’s policy on talents. • Major R & D funding sources.

More Related