Chinese Minister of Science and Technology Xu Guanhua said
Friday that lack of coordination between research institutions have
led to repetitive purchases of expensive laboratory equipments and
caused great waste in a country shy of research fund.
As a result, large research equipments are running only 2 hours
in a work day in China, while the same equipments are operating to
the capacity of 13.6 hours on average in developed countries, Xu
said in a report to the national legislature.
He highlighted the shocking waste of resources to lawmakers in
an example of the procurement of MODIS, or moderate-resolution
imaging spectroradiometer receiver, used for receiving data from
remote sensing satellites, which is an expensive gadget coveted by
scientists across the globe.
Even at today's price, each receiver costs 150,000 to 300,000
U.S. dollars, depending on whether it was produced in China or
imported. The United States boasts of 16 MODIS receivers under its
possession, which have satisfied all the needs of its scientists,
while most European countries have only one for each.
But in China, 30 have already been installed and additional 50
would have been ordered according to initial plans by research
institutions, the minister said.
Such practices are "hindering the country's drive to innovation
and development," Xu said, noting that China's annual investment in
research was just 25 billion U.S. dollars in 2004, just 8 percent
of the United States expenditures.
"The current research mechanism, complicated by various
government departments at different levels, is encouraging squander
of valuable resources in the form of repetitive purchases of
expensive laboratory equipments," Xu said.
According to Dr. Liu Chuang, director of the Global Change
Information and Research Center of the Chinese Academy of Sciences,
in Beijing alone, 10 MODIS receivers have been installed, and every
province in China once had plans to buy at least one.
Thanks to a watchdog overseeing the purchases of expensive lab
equipments set up by the Ministry of Science and Technology in
2003, the original orders for 50 MODIS receivers were slashed, and
the total number of the equipments in China will be brought under
40, Dr. Liu said.
To Minister Xu, more worrisome is the lack of coordination
between government departments and research institutions, which
will "make the mission impossible to build China into one of the
worlds science powers," Xu said.
China has set an ambitious plan earlier this year to invigorate
its scientific research, aiming to increase its total research and
development expenditures to 2.5 percent of the gross domestic
product (GDP) by 2020 from 1.23 percent in 2004, up to the level of
developed economies and top scientific powers.
To ensure cost-effectiveness of such investments, China will
break down research barriers, including those that separate
military research and civil development, Xu said.
"China will also make businesses the locomotive of innovation
and technological progress through policy incentives," Xu said.
(Xinhua News Agency April 28, 2006)