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Chinese President Hu Jintao (L) inspects
the Anhui Heli Co., Ltd. in east China's Anhui Province, Jan. 13, 2008. Hu
made an inspection tour to Anhui from Jan. 11 to 14. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Jan. 14 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Hu
Jintao on Monday concluded his inspection tour of the eastern Anhui Province,
showing concern for local economic development and people's livelihood.
During his four-day visit, he went to Wuhu, Fuyang
and the provincial capital, Hefei, touring factories, villages, communities and
disaster-hit areas.
He dropped in scientific research institutes and
enterprises engaging in independent innovation, including the Institute of
Plasma Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), a local forklift
factory and automobile manufacturer Chery.
The president placed his emphasis of the tour on the
shift of local economic development mode, improvement of independent innovation
capabilities and industry structure upgrading.
While inspecting factories, Hu visited production
workshops, central control rooms, laboratories and testing centers, carefully
listening to introductions and examining products.
He was delighted to see independent innovation
achievements made by these enterprises and research institutes, encouraging them
to continue to tackle key problems by emancipating the mind and sticking to the
path of independent innovation with Chinese characteristics.
When visiting Chery, the country's largest
Chinese-owned automobile manufacture with a brief history of 11 years, Hu
carefully observed car accessories and engine models while discussing with
enterprise leaders the development of the country's auto industry.
Along a production line, Hu watched the process of
car assembling.
Noting that Chery car exports had amounted to more
than half of the country's total, Hu said independent innovation was core
competitiveness, and the enterprise should invest more in research and
development and "take a larger stride" in innovation.
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Chinese President Hu Jintao (2nd L
front) inspects the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) Institute of Plasma
Physics in Hefei, capital of east China's Anhui Province, Jan. 13, 2008.
Hu made an inspection tour to Anhui from Jan. 11 to 14. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
In the CAS Institute of Plasma Physics, renowned for
joining the 11 billion euro (16.3 U.S. billion) ITER project aimed at incubating
a sustained solution of energy production, Hu learned carefully about the latest
contribution made by China to the largest ever scientific research program under
multinational collaboration.
He was delighted to see that China's Experimental
Advanced Super-conducting Tokamak, made by Chinese scientists, had put the
nation into an international advanced camp of the field.
Plasma physicists said the ITER, initiated by the
United States and the Soviet Union, is an enlarged equipment like "Tokamak," a
Russian word referring to a machine producing a doughnut-shaped magnetic field
for confining a plasma. Tokamak is one of several types of magnetic confinement
devices and the leading candidate for producing fusion energy.
The multi-nation collaborated ITER, designed to use
abundant resources of deuterium and tritium collected from seawater to produce
energy, and subsequently electricity, is expected to be completed in 2016.
In November 2006 China signed the Agreement on the
Establishment of the ITER International Fusion Energy Organization for the Joint
Implementation of the ITER Project. The European Union, India, Japan, the
Republic of Korea, Russia and the United States also signed.
Hu told researchers that independent innovation could
gain the nation new edge in development, encouraging them to make breakthroughs
in key technologies that "economic and social development is badly in need".
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