China granted its State
Scientific and Technological Award for 2006 in Beijing on Tuesday
to scientist Li Zhensheng for his achievements in wheat breeding.
Li is the tenth Chinese scientist to win this top award.
Chinese president Hu Jintao, with other senior leaders, presented
the top award to Li and other prizes to prominent scientists and
enterprises that have made remarkable progress in technological
innovation at the annual national science-technology prize awarding
ceremony Tuesday.
Li was awarded five million yuan (about US$600,000) at
the ceremony, including 500,000 yuan for himself and 4.5 million
for his research.
Li, born in 1931 in east China's Shandong Province, is an academician of the
Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS). He has developed fine strains of
wheat through distant hybridization and contributed to China's food
security.
"Science and technology plays a fundamental role in
the country's modernization process," said Premier Wen Jiabao at the ceremony, adding the working
and living conditions of scientists should be improved.
Wen highlighted the importance of strengthening
science and technology education in primary and middle schools and
encouraging the innovative spirit of students.
The top science prize winner Li successfully developed
the fine wheat strain "Xiaoyan No. 6" in 1979 that features drought
endurance, heat withstanding and disease resistance. "Xiaoyan"
series greatly boosted the country's crop production in following
years.
(Xinhua News Agency February 28, 2007)
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