Key blueprint for China's sci-tech future
Global Times
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A staff inspects Chinese supercomputer Sunway TaihuLight at a center in Wuxi, East China's Jiangsu Province. Photo: IC

A blueprint for China's development in the next five to 15 years has garnered wide spread attention as it offers a glimpse into the country's future.

China will uphold the central role of innovation in its modernization drive and improve efforts to achieve breakthroughs in key and core technologies, according to the draft outline of the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025) for national economic and social development and the long-range objectives through the year 2035.

The draft outline, which is under review by lawmakers across the country at the annual "two sessions," shed light on a future in which people lead a more digitalized life, and scientists blaze new trails in frontier areas such as next-generation artificial intelligence (AI) and gene technology.

Frontier technologies

The draft outline listed several sci-tech frontier areas that China will boost, including new-generation AI, quantum information, integrated circuits (IC), brain science, genetic research and clinical medicine.

"Like water and electricity, AI will enter almost every aspect of life in the next five to 10 years," said Liu Qingfeng, a deputy to the 13th National People's Congress (NPC) and board chairman of iFlytek, a leading Chinese AI firm.

Liu depicted AI teachers, AI assistants, AI doctors and a rise in "smarter" elderly care services empowered by AI technology.

Yao Dezhong, another NPC deputy and a professor at the University of Electronic Science and Technology, said he was greatly encouraged to find that brain science, which he is engaged in, is among the frontier areas included in the blueprint.

"It will facilitate the diagnosis and treatment of brain diseases, inspire the research of brain-like intelligence technology and promote the development of a new-generation AI industry," Yao said.

The draft outline also emphasized deep-space, deep-sea projects and polar exploration.

Sci-tech self-reliance

China will take self-reliance in science and technology as a strategic underpinning for national development, according to the draft outline.

However, there are still weak links in China's drive to build an innovative country, although it has made a series of sci-tech achievements, said Minister of Science and Technology Wang Zhigang.

China's self-developed chips have already been widely used in the Beidou Navigation Satellite System and supercomputers, but there is still a gap compared with the world's most advanced technologies in the area, Zhou said.

According to the five-year plan, China will strengthen its original sci-tech innovation and pool resources to develop key technologies in fields including biosafety, medical equipment, core components and basic materials, among others.

Basic research

China will invest more in basic research over the next five years, with such funding expected to reach over 8 percent of all research and development expenditure, according to the draft outline. It will also formulate a 10-year action plan for basic research.

"We need to strengthen basic research that is highly related to industries of the future," said Tian Gang, an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and also a national political advisor.

China has established 13 applied mathematics centers and plans to build several research centers and platforms for basic disciplines.

Enterprises also embrace the importance of basic research. Tech giant Tencent has launched the Xplorer Prize to promote cutting-edge technology research.

Int'l cooperation

The draft outline said China would strengthen international sci-tech cooperation that is more open, inclusive and beneficial to all.

China's Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST) is scheduled to be available for scientists worldwide from April 1. In the first year of the telescope's opening to the global scientific community, about 10 percent of the observation time will be reserved for foreign scientists.

"We hope to go forward hand in hand with our foreign counterparts to explore the mysteries of the universe and build a community with a shared future for humankind," said Bao Weiming, an expert from the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation.

Although China is pursuing a path of technological self-sufficiency, it does not mean the country will shut itself out of global research development.

Xue Lan, a professor from Tsinghua University, said self-reliance does not contradict integration into the global industrial chain, citing the IC industry as an example.

"The IC industry is a global industry, where no country can shut its doors to the outside world," Xue said.