How China is redrawing the map of world science
2019; Nature Portfolio; Volume: 569; Issue: 7754 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1038/d41586-019-01124-7
ISSN1476-4687
Autores Tópico(s)Science, Research, and Medicine
Resumon a freezing November morning, Ashraf Islam is 3,000 kilometres from his family in balmy Bangladesh, but the weather is far from his mind as he gushes about the science opportunities he has encountered in Beijing."We have good facilities at home, but the facilities here are nothing like what I've used before, " says Islam, who is working towards a PhD in China researching techniques to remove organic matter from wastewater, an acute problem in Bangladesh.Htet Aung Phyo, a PhD student from Myanmar, is using his Chinesefunded fellowship in Beijing to develop ways to use bacteria to extract copper from low-grade ore.If his project succeeds, it could help to extend the lives of copper mines in Myanmar, some of which are operated by a Chinese company.A breakthrough would also mean more jobs in his own country."This is why I am here, " he says proudly.Phyo and Islam are two of 1,300 graduate students from dozens of countries who are spending up to four years in Beijing carrying out research to help solve scientific problems back home.Two hundred positions are funded each year by the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) in conjunction with The World Academy of Sciences (TWAS) in Trieste, Italy.But this is no ordinary fellowship scheme.Each of the 200 is a small part of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), the world's largest programme of loans and investments, including some grants, which China is brokering with 126 countries.Across much of the world, China's government, companies and local business partners have been building motorways, designing high-speed rail, mining fossil-fuel reserves, switching on power plants, installing thousands of surveillance cameras and unveiling air and sea ports (see 'Making connections').This is all part of a vast venture conceived by President Xi Jinping to transform global trade networks that both supply China and provide a market for its products. ALL ROADS LEAD TO CHINAChina's modern-day silk routes are reshaping science around the globe.
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