BEIJING, Oct. 13 -- The Chinese Government's
innovation investment is set to skyrocket over the next five years, a top
official said Thursday in Shenzhen.
Zhang Xiaoqiang, vice minister of the National
Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), said investment in this field would
stand at "tens of millions of yuan" during the period of the 11th Five-Year Plan
(2006-10).
"Our commission allocated 12 billion yuan (1.52
billion U. S. dollars) to technological innovation during the period of the 10th
Five-Year Plan (2001-05). I think the figure will be much bigger in the coming
five years," Zhang said at the China High-Tech Fair, which opened yesterday in
Shenzhen, South China's Guangdong Province.
The government's positive attitude attracted a
further 200 billion yuan (25.3 billion dollars) in innovation investment from
business between 2001 and 2005, said Zhang, who expected non-governmental
funding to grow in the coming five years.
According to the plan, the NDRC will allocate at
least 6 billion yuan (760 million dollars) to 12 major technological projects,
including the Spallation Neutron Source, testing devices for high-magnetic
fields and scientific research vessels for oceanographic research.
The Spallation Neutron Source will provide the most
intense pulsed neutron beams in the world for scientific research and industrial
development.
The NDRC will allocate a further 5 billion yuan
(632.9 million dollars) to improve the overall quality of China's scientific
research institutes.
Some of this cash will go to the Chinese Academy of
Sciences' efforts to become a world-leading institution by 2010. The remainder
of the 5 billion yuan (633 million dollars) will be used to build and upgrade 50
national engineering research centers, 100 national engineering laboratories and
300 national technical centers.
Meanwhile, the NDRC will also play a major role in
the local development of 17 major technologies, such as nuclear power stations
and high-speed railways. "Our great input in innovation will help allow for the
quick transfer of technologies into production, which could prompt a
transformation in economic performance and structure. It's good news for the
country's economic growth," Zhang said.
The government wants to shift China's economy from
its current heavy reliance on investment and a high level of energy consumption
to one that is technology-driven.
(Source: Chinadaily.com)