China Economy: News & Discussion

MiG-29SMT

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It doesn't count 5 millions of export.

The battles in Asean nations are hot now, this region Japanese brands own 85% share, but fast changing now.

The ASEAN as entity is the third largest economy in Asia, with 4 millions car sales per year.

View attachment 232807
Chinese car brands are not small, some have producction around a million a year, and Chinese engines for cars are used world wide, however see realistically the Japanese and German car brands are manufactured in China. the Mexican car manufacturers have production numbers in the few thousends
1702619809714.png

Zacua EV production line
China is not a minor player as Brand respects but definitively so Tata motors

Tata Motors registers total sales of 2,51,822 units in Q4 FY23, up 3% over Q4 FY22

The reality having a billion people helps a lot to both India and China, since domestic production has a domestic demand, in Brazil or Mexico being smaller populations the demand is smaller thus the brands make less cars.

Do we design and build cars definitively, but companies from Japan, Germany and the USA are the largest manufacturers.

Both India and China potentially will compete, for us it will take longer

Marcopolo is the largest Brazilian manufacturer of bus bodies, with an annual production of 30,000 buses, 55% of its production outside Brazil, and approximately 8% global market share.
1702619261161.png

.
 
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ym888

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Indian media ??! But isn't the Indian media a partisan commentator on Chinese matters ? I've seen so many statements by you & your fellow wumaos testifying to the same out here .
chindia

 

Azaad

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chindia

Aren't you aware Chang that The Hindu is the CCP's newspaper in India like People's Daily & Global Times are in China ?!
 

ym888

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ym888

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China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs
By Liu Wei


A Chinese space suit is displayed at an exhibition in Beijing, February 24, 2023. /CFP


A Chinese space suit is displayed at an exhibition in Beijing, February 24, 2023. /CFP
China's technology innovation capabilities have skyrocketed in the past decade, built on solid foundations laid since the implementation of the reform and opening-up policy around 45 years ago.
Space and aviation endeavor
The country has created numerous milestones in technology advances and there are more in the making. In late 2003, Yang Liwei became the country's astronaut, or taikonaut, to be sent into space. Five years later, in 2008, China's manned mission Shenzhou-7 taikonaut Zhai Zhigang performed a historic 20-minute space walk, making China the third nation in the world to independently conduct a spacewalk, following the former Soviet Union and the United States.
The progress has continued at pace. One of the biggest achievements Chinese scientists have made in the past 10 years is now flying over 400 kilometers above the Earth – the China Space Station. It took the nation less than two years and four crewed missions to construct its first long-stay home in space. By the end of 2022, the space station kicked off its stage of application and development, ready for thousands of experiments as well as international cooperation.
The China Space Station. /China Manned Space Agency


The China Space Station. /China Manned Space Agency
From the moon, China's Chang'e-5 probe retrieved fresh rock and soil samples in 2020. They were the first lunar samples humanity has obtained in more than four decades. China's exploration of the moon continues, as it plans to establish a lunar research station and commenced its first manned lunar exploration project, aiming to achieve the first manned landing on the moon by 2030 before the country readies more expeditions in deeper space.
In addition, China's interplanetary exploration program took a significant step forward when the Tianwen-1 rover made the country's first imprint on Mars in 2021.
Down below, inside the atmosphere, hovers another source of national pride – the country's first large passenger jumbo jet C919. Developed by Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China, the jet features a wingspan of nearly 36 meters and a length of about 39 meters. With the market operation of the C919 kicking off in 2021, the aircraft could not only reshape the global commercial aviation landscape but also symbolizes China's progress in the aerospace industry. The latest reports suggest over 1,000 orders for the C919 have already been placed.
China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs

Megaprojects
On the ground, China has already constructed the world's most sophisticated high-speed rail network and Chinese engineers are going the extra mile to test the speed limits of the trains. In the past summer, a new bullet train reached speeds of 453 kilometers per hour in test runs. At such a speed, the travel time between Beijing and Shanghai would be under three hours.
The CR450 science and technology innovation project is one of the key national science programs outlined in China's 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025). A massive amount of research, simulating calculations and tests are required to pave the way for developing the next generation bullet trains.
China has also completed an array of mega projects. It built one of the world's longest cross-sea bridge the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge. It developed the world's largest single-dish radio telescope Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST). It developed Hualong One, China's nuclear power reactor design, recognized as one of the world's most advanced third-generation nuclear power units. It constructed the Baihetan hydropower station, the world's second largest following the Three Gorges Dam project in central China.
The list could go on.
China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs

Greater R&D investment
All the exciting results could not have been achieved without R&D investment. In the past 10 years, China's annual research expenses surged to 3.09 trillion yuan ($434 billion) in 2022 from 1.03 trillion yuan in 2012, the second highest in the world. Meanwhile, its total number of R&D personnel has increased from 3.25 million to over 6 million.
China made it to 11th place in the global innovation index ranking in 2022, according to the World Intellectual Property Organization.
China's investment in basic scientific research also jumped quickly, from 49.9 billion yuan in 2012 to 195.1 billion yuan in 2022. Those investments helped Chinese scientists to study some of the world's most cutting-edge fields, from quantum computing to brain technologies.
In the meantime, China has created 19 national technology innovation centers, 420 technology transferring agencies and more than 40 technology exchange marketplaces. Those facilities helped to close technology related deals with 3.73 trillion yuan in 2021.
The Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST) in Pingtang County, Guizhou Province, southwest China. /CMG


The Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST) in Pingtang County, Guizhou Province, southwest China. /CMG
Broadened international cooperation
China has also expanded its collaborations with other countries and international institutes.
It has established scientific and technological cooperation relations with 161 countries and regions, and signed 116 intergovernmental scientific and technological cooperation agreements. The country has set up 10 major innovation dialogue mechanisms with the United States, the EU and Russia and started seven scientific and technological partnership programs with partners in Africa, ASEAN and Latin America.
International science projects such as data-driven research Deep Time Digital Earth, international nuclear fusion research ITER and intergovernmental international radio telescope project SKA are among the programs China has been engaged in.
Looking forward, China is slated to devote more resources and roll out new policies to encourage technology breakthroughs in crucial areas as part of its broader push to boost the economy. Promoting tech innovations has been listed as the top priority for China's economic work in 2024, according to the Central Economic Work Conference that concluded in mid-December.
China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs
 

SexyChineseLady

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China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs
By Liu Wei


A Chinese space suit is displayed at an exhibition in Beijing, February 24, 2023. /CFP


A Chinese space suit is displayed at an exhibition in Beijing, February 24, 2023. /CFP
China's technology innovation capabilities have skyrocketed in the past decade, built on solid foundations laid since the implementation of the reform and opening-up policy around 45 years ago.
Space and aviation endeavor
The country has created numerous milestones in technology advances and there are more in the making. In late 2003, Yang Liwei became the country's astronaut, or taikonaut, to be sent into space. Five years later, in 2008, China's manned mission Shenzhou-7 taikonaut Zhai Zhigang performed a historic 20-minute space walk, making China the third nation in the world to independently conduct a spacewalk, following the former Soviet Union and the United States.
The progress has continued at pace. One of the biggest achievements Chinese scientists have made in the past 10 years is now flying over 400 kilometers above the Earth – the China Space Station. It took the nation less than two years and four crewed missions to construct its first long-stay home in space. By the end of 2022, the space station kicked off its stage of application and development, ready for thousands of experiments as well as international cooperation.
The China Space Station. /China Manned Space Agency


The China Space Station. /China Manned Space Agency
From the moon, China's Chang'e-5 probe retrieved fresh rock and soil samples in 2020. They were the first lunar samples humanity has obtained in more than four decades. China's exploration of the moon continues, as it plans to establish a lunar research station and commenced its first manned lunar exploration project, aiming to achieve the first manned landing on the moon by 2030 before the country readies more expeditions in deeper space.
In addition, China's interplanetary exploration program took a significant step forward when the Tianwen-1 rover made the country's first imprint on Mars in 2021.
Down below, inside the atmosphere, hovers another source of national pride – the country's first large passenger jumbo jet C919. Developed by Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China, the jet features a wingspan of nearly 36 meters and a length of about 39 meters. With the market operation of the C919 kicking off in 2021, the aircraft could not only reshape the global commercial aviation landscape but also symbolizes China's progress in the aerospace industry. The latest reports suggest over 1,000 orders for the C919 have already been placed.
China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs

Megaprojects
On the ground, China has already constructed the world's most sophisticated high-speed rail network and Chinese engineers are going the extra mile to test the speed limits of the trains. In the past summer, a new bullet train reached speeds of 453 kilometers per hour in test runs. At such a speed, the travel time between Beijing and Shanghai would be under three hours.
The CR450 science and technology innovation project is one of the key national science programs outlined in China's 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025). A massive amount of research, simulating calculations and tests are required to pave the way for developing the next generation bullet trains.
China has also completed an array of mega projects. It built one of the world's longest cross-sea bridge the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge. It developed the world's largest single-dish radio telescope Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST). It developed Hualong One, China's nuclear power reactor design, recognized as one of the world's most advanced third-generation nuclear power units. It constructed the Baihetan hydropower station, the world's second largest following the Three Gorges Dam project in central China.
The list could go on.
China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs

Greater R&D investment
All the exciting results could not have been achieved without R&D investment. In the past 10 years, China's annual research expenses surged to 3.09 trillion yuan ($434 billion) in 2022 from 1.03 trillion yuan in 2012, the second highest in the world. Meanwhile, its total number of R&D personnel has increased from 3.25 million to over 6 million.
China made it to 11th place in the global innovation index ranking in 2022, according to the World Intellectual Property Organization.
China's investment in basic scientific research also jumped quickly, from 49.9 billion yuan in 2012 to 195.1 billion yuan in 2022. Those investments helped Chinese scientists to study some of the world's most cutting-edge fields, from quantum computing to brain technologies.
In the meantime, China has created 19 national technology innovation centers, 420 technology transferring agencies and more than 40 technology exchange marketplaces. Those facilities helped to close technology related deals with 3.73 trillion yuan in 2021.
The Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST) in Pingtang County, Guizhou Province, southwest China. /CMG


The Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST) in Pingtang County, Guizhou Province, southwest China. /CMG
Broadened international cooperation
China has also expanded its collaborations with other countries and international institutes.
It has established scientific and technological cooperation relations with 161 countries and regions, and signed 116 intergovernmental scientific and technological cooperation agreements. The country has set up 10 major innovation dialogue mechanisms with the United States, the EU and Russia and started seven scientific and technological partnership programs with partners in Africa, ASEAN and Latin America.
International science projects such as data-driven research Deep Time Digital Earth, international nuclear fusion research ITER and intergovernmental international radio telescope project SKA are among the programs China has been engaged in.
Looking forward, China is slated to devote more resources and roll out new policies to encourage technology breakthroughs in crucial areas as part of its broader push to boost the economy. Promoting tech innovations has been listed as the top priority for China's economic work in 2024, according to the Central Economic Work Conference that concluded in mid-December.
China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs
This is only the beginning. China is coming from a period where large portions of the industrial sectors imported foreign components over local ones -- best exemplified by Huawei's cellphones dependence on Android and overseas fabs before the ban.

In the coming years, most China companies will source from China for the majority and the most critical of their components. This means aircraft too -- you will see Chinese engines on Chinese airliners ;)
 

MiG-29SMT

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China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs
By Liu Wei


A Chinese space suit is displayed at an exhibition in Beijing, February 24, 2023. /CFP


A Chinese space suit is displayed at an exhibition in Beijing, February 24, 2023. /CFP
China's technology innovation capabilities have skyrocketed in the past decade, built on solid foundations laid since the implementation of the reform and opening-up policy around 45 years ago.
Space and aviation endeavor
The country has created numerous milestones in technology advances and there are more in the making. In late 2003, Yang Liwei became the country's astronaut, or taikonaut, to be sent into space. Five years later, in 2008, China's manned mission Shenzhou-7 taikonaut Zhai Zhigang performed a historic 20-minute space walk, making China the third nation in the world to independently conduct a spacewalk, following the former Soviet Union and the United States.
The progress has continued at pace. One of the biggest achievements Chinese scientists have made in the past 10 years is now flying over 400 kilometers above the Earth – the China Space Station. It took the nation less than two years and four crewed missions to construct its first long-stay home in space. By the end of 2022, the space station kicked off its stage of application and development, ready for thousands of experiments as well as international cooperation.
The China Space Station. /China Manned Space Agency


The China Space Station. /China Manned Space Agency
From the moon, China's Chang'e-5 probe retrieved fresh rock and soil samples in 2020. They were the first lunar samples humanity has obtained in more than four decades. China's exploration of the moon continues, as it plans to establish a lunar research station and commenced its first manned lunar exploration project, aiming to achieve the first manned landing on the moon by 2030 before the country readies more expeditions in deeper space.
In addition, China's interplanetary exploration program took a significant step forward when the Tianwen-1 rover made the country's first imprint on Mars in 2021.
Down below, inside the atmosphere, hovers another source of national pride – the country's first large passenger jumbo jet C919. Developed by Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China, the jet features a wingspan of nearly 36 meters and a length of about 39 meters. With the market operation of the C919 kicking off in 2021, the aircraft could not only reshape the global commercial aviation landscape but also symbolizes China's progress in the aerospace industry. The latest reports suggest over 1,000 orders for the C919 have already been placed.
China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs

Megaprojects
On the ground, China has already constructed the world's most sophisticated high-speed rail network and Chinese engineers are going the extra mile to test the speed limits of the trains. In the past summer, a new bullet train reached speeds of 453 kilometers per hour in test runs. At such a speed, the travel time between Beijing and Shanghai would be under three hours.
The CR450 science and technology innovation project is one of the key national science programs outlined in China's 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025). A massive amount of research, simulating calculations and tests are required to pave the way for developing the next generation bullet trains.
China has also completed an array of mega projects. It built one of the world's longest cross-sea bridge the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge. It developed the world's largest single-dish radio telescope Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST). It developed Hualong One, China's nuclear power reactor design, recognized as one of the world's most advanced third-generation nuclear power units. It constructed the Baihetan hydropower station, the world's second largest following the Three Gorges Dam project in central China.
The list could go on.
China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs

Greater R&D investment
All the exciting results could not have been achieved without R&D investment. In the past 10 years, China's annual research expenses surged to 3.09 trillion yuan ($434 billion) in 2022 from 1.03 trillion yuan in 2012, the second highest in the world. Meanwhile, its total number of R&D personnel has increased from 3.25 million to over 6 million.
China made it to 11th place in the global innovation index ranking in 2022, according to the World Intellectual Property Organization.
China's investment in basic scientific research also jumped quickly, from 49.9 billion yuan in 2012 to 195.1 billion yuan in 2022. Those investments helped Chinese scientists to study some of the world's most cutting-edge fields, from quantum computing to brain technologies.
In the meantime, China has created 19 national technology innovation centers, 420 technology transferring agencies and more than 40 technology exchange marketplaces. Those facilities helped to close technology related deals with 3.73 trillion yuan in 2021.
The Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST) in Pingtang County, Guizhou Province, southwest China. /CMG


The Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST) in Pingtang County, Guizhou Province, southwest China. /CMG
Broadened international cooperation
China has also expanded its collaborations with other countries and international institutes.
It has established scientific and technological cooperation relations with 161 countries and regions, and signed 116 intergovernmental scientific and technological cooperation agreements. The country has set up 10 major innovation dialogue mechanisms with the United States, the EU and Russia and started seven scientific and technological partnership programs with partners in Africa, ASEAN and Latin America.
International science projects such as data-driven research Deep Time Digital Earth, international nuclear fusion research ITER and intergovernmental international radio telescope project SKA are among the programs China has been engaged in.
Looking forward, China is slated to devote more resources and roll out new policies to encourage technology breakthroughs in crucial areas as part of its broader push to boost the economy. Promoting tech innovations has been listed as the top priority for China's economic work in 2024, according to the Central Economic Work Conference that concluded in mid-December.
China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs
Most of it is tech tranfers since all the invested done by foreign companies passed technology


Example Airbus A-320 whch led to build the airframe of C919, MD-90 was a russified abd adapted to Chinese needs, same applies to mos jet engines used by China, J-10 which is a Lavi modified..
Same applies to cars, Computers or most trechnologis China have
 

MiG-29SMT

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This is only the beginning. China is coming from a period where large portions of the industrial sectors imported foreign components over local ones -- best exemplified by Huawei's cellphones dependence on Android and overseas fabs before the ban.

In the coming years, most China companies will source from China for the majority and the most critical of their components. This means aircraft too -- you will see Chinese engines on Chinese airliners ;)
What Is Forced Technology Transfer (FTT)?
Forced technology transfer (FTT) is a practice in which a domestic government forces foreign businesses to share their tech in exchange for market access. The practice is common in China. When a company wants to enter the Chinese market, the Chinese government can compel the firm to share its technology with Chinese companies.


Forced technology transfer (“FTT”) has been the most acrimonious issue in the current U.S.–China trade war. The United States has imposed several rounds of hefty tariffs on China because of the latter’s FTT practices. This Article provides a comprehensive analysis of China’s alleged FTT practices. The United States has accused China of using ownership restrictions and administrative processes to compel United States’ firms to transfer technology to Chinese entities. While China has undertaken a series of reforms prohibiting FTT practices and has signed the Phase-One trade agreement with the United States, the concerns of its trading partners and foreign businesses over FTT have not been entirely alleviated. This Article notes that China’s FTT practices are not uncommon in the developing world. However, such “market-for-technology” or quid pro quo policies have been increasingly scrutinized in the international investment, trade, and intellectual property policy settings in recent years. Moreover, despite China’s above-mentioned reforms, FTT remains an unsolved issue in the current international economic environment.


Airbus Celebrates Technology Transfer to China
Airbus took a significant step forward in its transfer of aircraft manufacturing technology to China. On Mar. 31st, the first delivery ceremony of fixed trailing edges for Airbus' A320 wings was held at Xi'an Aircraft Industry (Group) Co., Ltd. China is the first country outside of Europe that Airbus has cooperated with on its wing section program.
In 1999, Airbus signed an agreement with China Aviation Industry Corporation (AVIC I), under which Airbus would transfer manufacturing technologies and production lines used in the making of A320 wings components, with the objective of enabling China to manufacture whole wings.

At yesterday ceremony, Tom Williams, Airbus's executive vice president of procurement, said that the proportion of difficulty in manufacturing and assembling A320 wing technology to that of the overall technology of manufacturing a full aircraft is from 1/3 to 1/2.

At present, over 3600 Airbus aircrafts serve over 200 airlines around the world. Over half of these aircraft use parts manufactured in China.

(Chinanews April 1, 2005)
 

MiG-29SMT

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China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs
By Liu Wei


A Chinese space suit is displayed at an exhibition in Beijing, February 24, 2023. /CFP


A Chinese space suit is displayed at an exhibition in Beijing, February 24, 2023. /CFP
China's technology innovation capabilities have skyrocketed in the past decade, built on solid foundations laid since the implementation of the reform and opening-up policy around 45 years ago.
Space and aviation endeavor
The country has created numerous milestones in technology advances and there are more in the making. In late 2003, Yang Liwei became the country's astronaut, or taikonaut, to be sent into space. Five years later, in 2008, China's manned mission Shenzhou-7 taikonaut Zhai Zhigang performed a historic 20-minute space walk, making China the third nation in the world to independently conduct a spacewalk, following the former Soviet Union and the United States.
The progress has continued at pace. One of the biggest achievements Chinese scientists have made in the past 10 years is now flying over 400 kilometers above the Earth – the China Space Station. It took the nation less than two years and four crewed missions to construct its first long-stay home in space. By the end of 2022, the space station kicked off its stage of application and development, ready for thousands of experiments as well as international cooperation.
The China Space Station. /China Manned Space Agency


The China Space Station. /China Manned Space Agency
From the moon, China's Chang'e-5 probe retrieved fresh rock and soil samples in 2020. They were the first lunar samples humanity has obtained in more than four decades. China's exploration of the moon continues, as it plans to establish a lunar research station and commenced its first manned lunar exploration project, aiming to achieve the first manned landing on the moon by 2030 before the country readies more expeditions in deeper space.
In addition, China's interplanetary exploration program took a significant step forward when the Tianwen-1 rover made the country's first imprint on Mars in 2021.
Down below, inside the atmosphere, hovers another source of national pride – the country's first large passenger jumbo jet C919. Developed by Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China, the jet features a wingspan of nearly 36 meters and a length of about 39 meters. With the market operation of the C919 kicking off in 2021, the aircraft could not only reshape the global commercial aviation landscape but also symbolizes China's progress in the aerospace industry. The latest reports suggest over 1,000 orders for the C919 have already been placed.
China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs

Megaprojects
On the ground, China has already constructed the world's most sophisticated high-speed rail network and Chinese engineers are going the extra mile to test the speed limits of the trains. In the past summer, a new bullet train reached speeds of 453 kilometers per hour in test runs. At such a speed, the travel time between Beijing and Shanghai would be under three hours.
The CR450 science and technology innovation project is one of the key national science programs outlined in China's 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025). A massive amount of research, simulating calculations and tests are required to pave the way for developing the next generation bullet trains.
China has also completed an array of mega projects. It built one of the world's longest cross-sea bridge the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge. It developed the world's largest single-dish radio telescope Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST). It developed Hualong One, China's nuclear power reactor design, recognized as one of the world's most advanced third-generation nuclear power units. It constructed the Baihetan hydropower station, the world's second largest following the Three Gorges Dam project in central China.
The list could go on.
China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs

Greater R&D investment
All the exciting results could not have been achieved without R&D investment. In the past 10 years, China's annual research expenses surged to 3.09 trillion yuan ($434 billion) in 2022 from 1.03 trillion yuan in 2012, the second highest in the world. Meanwhile, its total number of R&D personnel has increased from 3.25 million to over 6 million.
China made it to 11th place in the global innovation index ranking in 2022, according to the World Intellectual Property Organization.
China's investment in basic scientific research also jumped quickly, from 49.9 billion yuan in 2012 to 195.1 billion yuan in 2022. Those investments helped Chinese scientists to study some of the world's most cutting-edge fields, from quantum computing to brain technologies.
In the meantime, China has created 19 national technology innovation centers, 420 technology transferring agencies and more than 40 technology exchange marketplaces. Those facilities helped to close technology related deals with 3.73 trillion yuan in 2021.
The Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST) in Pingtang County, Guizhou Province, southwest China. /CMG


The Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST) in Pingtang County, Guizhou Province, southwest China. /CMG
Broadened international cooperation
China has also expanded its collaborations with other countries and international institutes.
It has established scientific and technological cooperation relations with 161 countries and regions, and signed 116 intergovernmental scientific and technological cooperation agreements. The country has set up 10 major innovation dialogue mechanisms with the United States, the EU and Russia and started seven scientific and technological partnership programs with partners in Africa, ASEAN and Latin America.
International science projects such as data-driven research Deep Time Digital Earth, international nuclear fusion research ITER and intergovernmental international radio telescope project SKA are among the programs China has been engaged in.
Looking forward, China is slated to devote more resources and roll out new policies to encourage technology breakthroughs in crucial areas as part of its broader push to boost the economy. Promoting tech innovations has been listed as the top priority for China's economic work in 2024, according to the Central Economic Work Conference that concluded in mid-December.
China's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs's tech innovation prospers as nation targets breakthroughs
chinese closes and copied technology

Su-27 clone
1702692522183.png

Spey engine was copied and used in JH-7

1702692577288.png


1702692654578.png



1702692756188.png

German Transrapid based Shanghai Maglev at Longyand Rd. station / George
1702692834350.png


R&D yeah yeah Japanese train based chinese train wow

1702692916039.png


1702692931898.png
 

ym888

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China home to over 10,000 digital workshops, smart factories

Workers assemble wind turbine wheels at a factory in Lianyungang Economic and Technological Development Zone, East China's Jiangsu province, Feb 28, 2023. [Photo by Geng Yuhe/For China Daily]
NANJING - China has built over 10,000 digital workshops and smart factories and become the world's largest intelligent manufacturing application market, according to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
Xin Guobin, vice-minister of industry and information technology, revealed the data during his speech at the 2023 World Intelligent Manufacturing Conference held from Wednesday to Friday in Nanjing, capital of East China's Jiangsu province.
According to the official, intelligent manufacturing has increasingly become the key force that promotes the optimization of industrial systems and the transformation of the manufacturing mode.
In 2022 alone, the total value of supporting industries such as intelligent manufacturing equipment, industrial software, and system solutions in China exceeded 4 trillion yuan (about $559 billion), and the 5G technologies were applied in nearly 2,000 factories across the country, Xin noted.
Co-hosted by the Jiangsu provincial government, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, and the China Association for Science and Technology, this year's conference is themed on intelligent, digital, and connected transformation and digital-real economy integration and innovation.
 

ym888

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Photovoltaic product exports hit record high in first 10 months

An employee cleans solar panels in Zhongwei, Ningxia Hui autonomous region. YUAN HONGYAN/FOR CHINA DAILY
The value of photovoltaic products exported by China hit a record in the first 10 months of 2023, with industry experts saying the momentum will persist through the year, buoyed by higher demand amid a green energy transition worldwide.
The export value, which includes photovoltaic products such as silicon wafers, cells and modules, reached about $43 billion during the first 10 months, the China Photovoltaic Industry Association said on Friday.
The output value of China's photovoltaic manufacturing sector also touched a record 1.3 trillion yuan ($182.6 billion), while newly installed photovoltaic power generation capacity in the country also climbed to a record 142.56 gigawatts, it said.
While the export market is diversifying, Europe remains the largest importer of Chinese photovoltaic products, accounting for around 52.9 percent of the total export value.
Solar product exports to Asian countries also rose slightly during the first 10 months, said Wang Bohua, honorary chairman of the association.
The European Union was the biggest destination for China's PV exports in 2022, buying nearly $23 billion worth of products, up 113 percent year-on-year. This is equivalent to about 84 GW of modules, more than half of China's total module exports in 2022.
According to Tan Youru, an analyst at BloombergNEF, China exported 212 GW of solar cells and modules in the first 10 months of 2023, some 19 percent more than exports in the whole of 2022.
While the value of solar product exports from China was flat in the third quarter, volumes rose month-on-month, thanks to lower module prices, he said.
As 2023 draws to a close, the solar industry is installing record volumes worldwide and selling at record-low prices. BloombergNEF has increased its build forecast yet again for this year to 413 GW worldwide, largely due to the Chinese mainland.
Wang expects China to add 160 to 180 GW of solar power in 2023, a record annual rise in capacity.
With tremendous breakthrough in photovoltaic technology in China, Wang said renewable energy will play a dominant role in the power generation landscape by 2030.
China has consistently been at the forefront of global research and development in solar power generation technology.
Longi Green Energy Technology Co Ltd, a leading enterprise in the photovoltaic industry in China, broke the world record last month with a conversion efficiency of 33.9 percent for silicon-perovskite tandem solar cells.
Improving cell conversion efficiency and reducing the cost of electricity are key drivers in the development of the photovoltaic industry.
The photovoltaic conversion efficiency of solar cells is a crucial indicator and benchmark for evaluating the potential of photovoltaic technologies, said Li Zhenguo, president of Longi.
Industry experts said the growth in solar exports from China is also helping meet growing demand for clean and affordable power, driven by markets like Europe that are aiming to increase energy security.
Europe's manufacturing capacity is relatively smaller compared with that of China and it needs to rely on China in the short to medium term, said Luo Zuoxian, head of intelligence and research at the Sinopec Economics and Development Research Institute.
The increasing demand for solar power across the world will continuously provide opportunities for solar companies in China, the world's top solar manufacturer, leading to a robust rise in exports of Chinese solar components in the years ahead, he said.
 

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Photovoltaic product exports hit record high in first 10 months

An employee cleans solar panels in Zhongwei, Ningxia Hui autonomous region. YUAN HONGYAN/FOR CHINA DAILY
The value of photovoltaic products exported by China hit a record in the first 10 months of 2023, with industry experts saying the momentum will persist through the year, buoyed by higher demand amid a green energy transition worldwide.
The export value, which includes photovoltaic products such as silicon wafers, cells and modules, reached about $43 billion during the first 10 months, the China Photovoltaic Industry Association said on Friday.
The output value of China's photovoltaic manufacturing sector also touched a record 1.3 trillion yuan ($182.6 billion), while newly installed photovoltaic power generation capacity in the country also climbed to a record 142.56 gigawatts, it said.
While the export market is diversifying, Europe remains the largest importer of Chinese photovoltaic products, accounting for around 52.9 percent of the total export value.
Solar product exports to Asian countries also rose slightly during the first 10 months, said Wang Bohua, honorary chairman of the association.
The European Union was the biggest destination for China's PV exports in 2022, buying nearly $23 billion worth of products, up 113 percent year-on-year. This is equivalent to about 84 GW of modules, more than half of China's total module exports in 2022.
According to Tan Youru, an analyst at BloombergNEF, China exported 212 GW of solar cells and modules in the first 10 months of 2023, some 19 percent more than exports in the whole of 2022.
While the value of solar product exports from China was flat in the third quarter, volumes rose month-on-month, thanks to lower module prices, he said.
As 2023 draws to a close, the solar industry is installing record volumes worldwide and selling at record-low prices. BloombergNEF has increased its build forecast yet again for this year to 413 GW worldwide, largely due to the Chinese mainland.
Wang expects China to add 160 to 180 GW of solar power in 2023, a record annual rise in capacity.
With tremendous breakthrough in photovoltaic technology in China, Wang said renewable energy will play a dominant role in the power generation landscape by 2030.
China has consistently been at the forefront of global research and development in solar power generation technology.
Longi Green Energy Technology Co Ltd, a leading enterprise in the photovoltaic industry in China, broke the world record last month with a conversion efficiency of 33.9 percent for silicon-perovskite tandem solar cells.
Improving cell conversion efficiency and reducing the cost of electricity are key drivers in the development of the photovoltaic industry.
The photovoltaic conversion efficiency of solar cells is a crucial indicator and benchmark for evaluating the potential of photovoltaic technologies, said Li Zhenguo, president of Longi.
Industry experts said the growth in solar exports from China is also helping meet growing demand for clean and affordable power, driven by markets like Europe that are aiming to increase energy security.
Europe's manufacturing capacity is relatively smaller compared with that of China and it needs to rely on China in the short to medium term, said Luo Zuoxian, head of intelligence and research at the Sinopec Economics and Development Research Institute.
The increasing demand for solar power across the world will continuously provide opportunities for solar companies in China, the world's top solar manufacturer, leading to a robust rise in exports of Chinese solar components in the years ahead, he said.
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Fritts was an American inventor credited with creating the first working selenium cell in 1883. However, he was not the one who discovered photoconductivity in selenium. It was English electrical engineer Willoughby Smith who observed it first while experimenting with materials for building underwater telegraph cables. Then, natural philosophy professor William Grylls Adams and his student, Richard Evans Day, learned about it and really worked on the question, publishing the definitive article on the subject, “The Action of Light on Selenium,” in 1877.
It took years to turn solar energy into a viable alternative. In 1954, Calvin Souther Fuller, Daryl Chapin, and Gerald Pearson, scientists at Bell Laboratories, invented the first solar cell with 4% efficiency. It was a game changer, as it was the first with sufficient efficiency to run everyday equipment. Three years later, Hoffman Electronics doubled that efficiency—and went up to 14% in 1960.

It was in 1958 that solar cells (the Hoffman ones) were first used in a prominent application. That year, NASA used them on the Vanguard satellite as an alternative power source to the primary battery power source. The following year, Explorer 6 was equipped with large wing-shaped solar arrays—it then became a common feature in satellites.
 

MiG-29SMT

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R&D chinese style; buy, copy and change name sometimes modify it and claim it is your own technology

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AS350 Ecureuil
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An Eurocopter modifid dolphin

yes great R&D
 

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Global PV investment will surpass oil for the first time, reaching $382 billion


On December 15, according to Caixin News Agency, Wang Bohua, honorary chairman of the China Photovoltaic Industry Association, said at the 2023 photovoltaic industry annual conference that the growth momentum of the photovoltaic industry is strong this year.

It is reported that from January to October, China's new photovoltaic installed capacity of 142.56GW, an increase of 145%, a record high. Up to now, more than half of the country's new power generation capacity comes from photovoltaic power generation. Wang Bohua said that global clean energy-related investment has exceeded fossil energy for eight consecutive years. IT is expected that in 2023, solar energy investment will reach $382 billion (IT home note: about 2.72 trillion yuan at present), and oil investment will reach $371 billion (about 2.65 trillion yuan at present). This means that solar investment will surpass oil investment for the first time in history.

In this case, the photovoltaic Association raised the installed capacity forecast for 2023 for the second time, and it is expected that the new installed capacity of global photovoltaic is raised from 305-350 GW to 345-390 GW; China's new PV installed capacity increased from 120-140 GW to 160-180 GW.


According to the National Energy Administration statistics, as of the end of September this year, the cumulative installed capacity of household distributed photovoltaic exceeded 100 million kilowatts, reaching 105 million kilowatts, boosting the total installed capacity of photovoltaic power generation in China to more than 500 million kilowatts, reaching 520 million kilowatts. According to statistics, at present, the cumulative installed number of distributed photovoltaic households in rural areas of China has exceeded 5 million households, driving effective investment of more than 500 billion yuan.
 

MiG-29SMT

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Global PV investment will surpass oil for the first time, reaching $382 billion


On December 15, according to Caixin News Agency, Wang Bohua, honorary chairman of the China Photovoltaic Industry Association, said at the 2023 photovoltaic industry annual conference that the growth momentum of the photovoltaic industry is strong this year.

It is reported that from January to October, China's new photovoltaic installed capacity of 142.56GW, an increase of 145%, a record high. Up to now, more than half of the country's new power generation capacity comes from photovoltaic power generation. Wang Bohua said that global clean energy-related investment has exceeded fossil energy for eight consecutive years. IT is expected that in 2023, solar energy investment will reach $382 billion (IT home note: about 2.72 trillion yuan at present), and oil investment will reach $371 billion (about 2.65 trillion yuan at present). This means that solar investment will surpass oil investment for the first time in history.

In this case, the photovoltaic Association raised the installed capacity forecast for 2023 for the second time, and it is expected that the new installed capacity of global photovoltaic is raised from 305-350 GW to 345-390 GW; China's new PV installed capacity increased from 120-140 GW to 160-180 GW.


According to the National Energy Administration statistics, as of the end of September this year, the cumulative installed capacity of household distributed photovoltaic exceeded 100 million kilowatts, reaching 105 million kilowatts, boosting the total installed capacity of photovoltaic power generation in China to more than 500 million kilowatts, reaching 520 million kilowatts. According to statistics, at present, the cumulative installed number of distributed photovoltaic households in rural areas of China has exceeded 5 million households, driving effective investment of more than 500 billion yuan.
R&D chinese style


Ex-Samsung exec charged with stealing trade secrets to create copycat chip factory in China

But four lines tucked halfway into an otherwise upbeat, 281-page annual report from February hinted at a potentially incendiary problem. ASML accused a Beijing-based firm, regarded by Chinese officials as one of the country’s most promising tech ventures, of potentially stealing its trade secrets. Behind the brief disclosure is an extraordinary multiyear tale of intellectual property theft and a broader threat facing the $556 billion semiconductor industry.

In the report, ASML said the Chinese company, Dongfang Jingyuan Electron Ltd., is related to a defunct Silicon Valley firm, Xtal Inc., which ASML sued for intellectual property theft. A 2018 trial in California, which received scant attention at the time, provided more detail. Dongfang and Xtal were essentially the same, created a month apart in 2014 by a former ASML engineer named Zongchang Yu, ASML’s attorney told the court


US electric vehicle (EV) maker Tesla has sued a Chinese chip designer and auto parts maker for infringing upon its intellectual property (IP) and stealing technology secrets, Chinese media reported on Wednesday.

State media Shanghai Securities Journal (SSJ) first reported Tesla’s lawsuit against Bingling Intelligent Technology, saying the cause of the case was “infringement of technical secrets and unfair competition disputes.”

Tech news portal Pandaily also reported the lawsuit, saying Tesla accused Bingling of violating its IP rights in integrated circuit chip design and stealing the carmaker’s tech secrets.

 

MiG-29SMT

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The C919 is powered by the CFM LEAP-1C engine, which is the same engine that powers the A320neo. The LEAP engine offers improved fuel efficiency, lower emissions, and reduced noise compared to previous generation engines. However, the C919's fuel efficiency is not only determined by its engine choice, but also by its aerodynamic design, weight, and systems. According to some estimates, the C919 burns about 10% more fuel per seat than the A320neo, which translates into higher operating costs and environmental impact.
Flying longer

The limited range of the C919 restricts its ability to serve longer-haul markets and compete with the A320 on transcontinental or intercontinental routes.
The C919 may have an edge over its rivals in terms of acquisition price and political support from its home market, but it falls short in terms of capacity, range, fuel efficiency, and operating costs.


As one of the company’s three founding nations, Spain is home to major production facilities for commercial aircraft, helicopter, space and defence activities, not least final assembly lines for all Airbus Defence and Space military aircraft.

 

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