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UK, China industrial cooperation touted
The body of a TX4 is lowered onto its chassis on the production line at the London Taxi Company in England. [Photo/Agencies]
China and the UK have a lot to offer each
other in industry and advanced manufacturing in terms of developing staff
members with expertise, matching investments and commercialization of research
and academic findings, regional leaders of both said at the Second UK-China
Business Leaders Summit in Shanghai recently.
Companies and regional
leaders in China and UK may introduce opportunities for cooperation in the
sectors with the help of exchanges of educational and training systems at deeper
levels, such as an employer-led curriculum and more frequent dialogue between
the two sides, said one senior UK businessman.
The remarks were made by
Sir John Peace, Chair of Midlands Engine-an English collaboration between local
governments and the UK national government, local business and
universities-together with a plan to generate an additional 34 billion pounds
($42.8 billion) for the economy over the next 15 years and to create 300,000
jobs.
"Regional leaders in both China and UK will continue to encourage
the public and private sectors to an economic and culture exchange between the
two countries, and will make efforts to build up a key projects catalogue and a
key enterprise catalogue for regional cooperation projects," said Li Xiaolin,
president of the Chinese People's Association for Friendship with Foreign
Countries.
Collaboration between companies and universities with the
support of governments will help to build an infrastructure that creates great
prosperity and opportunity, said Sir Keith Burnett, vice-chancellor of the
University of Sheffield in an earlier interview.
"The Made in China 2025
initiative is vitally important ... and we want to be a part of it", he
said.
In the areas of aerospace, nuclear manufacturing research and other
disciplines, the University of Sheffield has been working with partners in China
on new technologies, he added.
From the early forms of joint programs
that enable students to study overseas to building up campuses in China's
cities-to the current collaboration involving companies, researchers and
universities-more long-term, innovation-driven projects have been operating as
both China and the UK attach increasing importance to innovation and
technological development, experts said at the summit.
Collaboration and
synergy between universities and companies was key to innovation and
technological enhancement, said Zhou Ji, head of the Chinese Academy of
Engineering.
Zhou said the more closely the two worked together, the more
benefits they brought to economic development and social welfare.
Fu
Guoqing, with the Shanghai Science and Technology Committee, said that more
institutional improvements and infrastructure supporting collaboration would
help. Fu said they brought together companies, government, think tanks,
researchers, young trained staff members and future scientists from various
countries-to help to create more engines for economic and social
development.
(From China Daily, 2016-11-14)