CAS Funds Five Centers To Study Climate & Green Technology

China has funded five centers to extend South-South ties and fund research into climate and green technology.

AsianScientist (Aug. 12, 2013) – China’s science academy is to back five centers of research excellence to extend collaboration with developing world scientists in the fields of climate, water, biotechnology, green technology and space technology for disaster mitigation.

The five existing centers are housed within institutes of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and will get US$6.5 million over the next three years from the academy to do joint research projects.

The funding will also go towards organizing workshops, training and PhD programs through the existing wider network of CAS-TWAS (the World Academy of Sciences) Centers of Excellence and the TWAS-UNESCO Associateship Scheme at Centers of Excellence in the South.

This will allow TWAS centers to go beyond their usual three-month exchanges of researchers to also organize workshops, according to executive director of TWAS, Romain Murenzi. “It will give them more capacity to carry out activities with TWAS,” he tells SciDev.Net.

The first workshops at the centers started this month and more are planned for September.

“The five centers of excellence should strengthen communication, use their complementary advantages and share resources,” says Cao Jinghua, the vice-director general of CAS’s Bureau of International Cooperation.

They were chosen out of 22 CAS-TWAS Centers of Excellence based on a peer review of their previous cooperation with TWAS and other developing countries, and their research capacity.

TWAS members and other scientists SciDev.Net contacted for comment welcomed the initiative.

“The five centers will play an important role in global scientific collaboration by increasing South-South training opportunities,” Salim Abdool Karim, director of the Center for the AIDS Program of Research in South Africa and a TWAS member, tells SciDev.Net.

Yongqiang Liu, a research meteorologist at the US Forest Services’ Center for Forest Disturbance Science, says China is one of the few developing countries with existing capacity in all the research areas.

For example, CAS’s Institute of Atmospheric Physics, which hosts one of the selected centers — the International Center for Climate and Environment Sciences — long ago developed its own global climate model and helped to create the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projections.

The center will contribute to climate change research in developing countries, which may in turn assist climate change mitigation efforts there, Liu says.

“It is critical to prepare future leaders to lead climate change research for developing countries,” Liu says.

The developing world has great potential to move towards sustainability if science and development are brought together in areas such as water conservation, environmental protection and in preparing for natural disasters, says Jianwu Tang, a scientist at the International Center for Ecology, Meteorology and Environment at Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology, China.

“I am hoping the CAS-TWAS Centers of Excellence will advance science, drive innovation and apply recently advanced knowledge in ecology, environmental science and sustainability science into the developing world,” Tang says.

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Source: Science and Development Network; Photo: Chinese Academy of Sciences, Flickr/Argonne National Laboratories.
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