Chinese scientific projects are to be opened to international
cooperation and professional exchanges, says a government
official.
The government would increase competitiveness by attracting more
innovative talent and tapping advanced technologies, said Shang
Yong, Vice Minister of Science and Technology.
"Some big projects are too costly and time-consuming for one
country alone," said Chen Hesheng, director of the High Energy
Physics Institute under the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
He mentioned the Beijing electron positron collider, which is
being upgraded at a cost of 640-million-yuan (US$82 million). The
job is expected to be done by the end of 2007.
A group of Chinese and US scientists discovered a new particle
last year using the collider, causing a stir in the international
physics world said Chen.
Since 2005, China has joined a number of major international
research and development projects, including the 3.5-billion-euro
Galileo system, a network of 30 global positioning satellites
intended for civilian use.
The government's 11th five-year plan (2006-2010) for
international cooperation in science and technology has identified
energy, biology and space technology as major areas for such
cooperation.
(Xinhua News Agency December 7, 2006)
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