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	<title>Science Articles &#38; Inventions Online &#187; CHINA</title>
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		<title>CHINA TALKS OF MAKING AN ARTIFICIAL SUN</title>
		<link>http://www.sciencearticlesonline.com/2011/05/china-talks-of-making-an-artificial-sun/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 04 May 2011 08:43:23 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[China&#8217;s bid for man-made sun Experimental nuclear fusion reactor is seen at a laboratory in the Southwest Institute of Physics in Chengdu, Sichuan Province. Photo: Reuters David Stanway May 4, 2011 &#8211; 12:54PM The congenial Professor Duan Xuru doesn&#8217;t look like a stereotypical mad scientist as he shows guests into a cluttered laboratory filled with [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>China&#8217;s bid for man-made sun</h1>
<div><img src="http://images.smh.com.au/2011/05/04/2342506/Chengdu729-420x0.jpg" alt="Experimental nuclear fusion reactor is seen at a laboratory in the Southwest Institute of Physics in Chengdu, Sichuan Province." />Experimental nuclear fusion reactor is seen at a laboratory in the Southwest Institute of Physics in Chengdu, Sichuan Province. <em>Photo: Reuters</em></p>
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<h5>David Stanway</h5>
<p><cite>May 4, 2011 &#8211; 12:54PM</cite></p>
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<p>The congenial Professor Duan Xuru doesn&#8217;t look like a stereotypical  mad scientist as he shows guests into a cluttered laboratory filled with  canisters, vacuum pumps and patched-up pipes tied together with spirals  of blue wire and rubber tubing.</p>
<p>But Professor Duan, based in the south-west Chinese city  of Chengdu, is working on an audacious project described as a &#8220;man-made  sun&#8221;. He hopes it will eventually create almost unlimited supplies of  cheap and clean energy.</p>
<p>Professor Duan is no maverick either, but a pioneer in  one of the many expeditions that China has launched to map out its  nuclear energy options in the future.</p>
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<p>Old-fashioned atom splitting has been in the spotlight  after Japan&#8217;s biggest earthquake and tsunami left an ageing nuclear  reactor complex on the north-east coast on the verge of catastrophic  meltdown.</p>
<p>While Germany and Italy have turned their backs on  nuclear power, China is pressing ahead with an ambitious plan to raise  capacity from 10.8 gigawatts at the end of 2010 to as much as 70 or 80  GW in 2020.</p>
<p>Many of the nuclear research institutes across the  country are working on advanced solutions to some of the problems facing  traditional reactors, from the recycling and storage of spent fuel to  terrorist attacks.</p>
<p>But Professor Duan and his state-funded team of  scientists are on a quest for the Holy Grail of nuclear physics: a  fusion reactor that can generate power by forcing nuclei together  instead of smashing them apart &#8211; mimicking the stellar activity that  brought heavy elements into existence and made the universe fit for  life.</p>
<p>Professor Duan said fusion could be the ultimate way  forward: it is far safer than traditional fission, requires barely 600  grams of hydrogen fuel a year for each 10-gigawatt plant, and creates  virtually no radioactive waste.</p>
<p>&#8220;Due to the problems in Japan, the government hopes  nuclear fusion can be realised in the near future,&#8221; said Professor Duan,  the director of fusion science at the South-western Institute of  Physics, founded in 1965 and funded by the state-owned China National  Nuclear Corporation (CNNC).</p>
<p>While fusion has moved some way beyond the purely  hypothetical after more than half a century of painstaking research, it  still remains some distance away from being feasible. Critically, the  energy required to induce a fusion reaction far exceeds the amount of  energy produced.</p>
<p>Fusion might be the ultimate goal, but in the near  future, all China&#8217;s practical efforts will continue to focus on a new  model of conventional fission reactors.</p>
<p>While China&#8217;s nuclear industry awaits the results of a  government review in the wake of the Fukushima crisis, all signs point  to China pushing ahead with its long-term strategy.</p>
<p>The National Development and Reform Commission said last  week China would continue to support the construction and development of  advanced nuclear reactors and related nuclear technologies.</p>
<p>&#8220;Suddenly, China has become even more important to the  world &#8211; as other people ask whether they still want to go ahead, China  still seems intent on going ahead at full speed,&#8221; said Steve Kidd,  deputy secretary general with the World Nuclear Association, a  London-based lobby group.</p>
<p>If traditional nuclear power represents the civil  application of the atomic weapons dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in  1945, fusion is an extension of the hydrogen bomb, first tested by the  United States in 1952.</p>
<p>Showing Reuters around a sweltering, hermetically-sealed  lab designed to bring hydrogen isotopes to an unthinkable 55-million  degree boil in a 1.65 metre vacuum chamber, Professor Duan said progress  had been slower than first expected at the dawn of the nuclear age.</p>
<p>&#8220;It took about nine years to go from the atomic bomb to  nuclear power, and we hoped it would take a maximum of 20 years to get  from the first H-bomb to a fusion reactor,&#8221; he said. &#8220;But in reality it  was very difficult because there were so many technical and scientific  challenges.&#8221;</p>
<p>Described by one observer as an attempt to put the sun in  a box, nuclear fusion has been derided as the province of cranks and  charlatans &#8211; the modern equivalent of the perpetual motion machines that  plagued US patent offices in the 19th century. Sceptics scoff that the  world is now 50 years away from fusion power &#8211; and always will be.</p>
<p>Professor Duan shrugged off the criticism. He has spent  more than 20 years in the field, including eight years in Germany, and  found reasons to be optimistic.</p>
<p>&#8220;Actually, the concept of nuclear fusion is very simple,&#8221;  he said with a wry smile. &#8220;The first thing is to generate the plasma.  The second thing is to heat the plasma to a few hundred million degrees.  And then you need to confine it.&#8221;</p>
<p>The devil, of course, is in the details.</p>
<p><strong>Exotic options</strong></p>
<p>As Japan&#8217;s stricken Fukushima plant lurched from crisis  to crisis in March and April, the safety of nuclear power was called  into question &#8211; including in China. Five days after the quake and  tsunami knocked out the 40-year-old Fukushima Daiichi complex, China  said it was suspending approvals for nuclear power plants pending safety  checks of plants in operation or under construction.</p>
<p>China by most calculations is already the world&#8217;s biggest  energy consumer, and demand for power is set to soar in the next  decade. But its dependence on fossil fuels have also turned it into the  world&#8217;s biggest source of greenhouse gas.</p>
<p>Professor Duan&#8217;s fusion reactor could be the answer to  China&#8217;s energy conundrum. It does not require hectares of space or  tonnes of scarce fuel or water resources. It produces no carbon dioxide  emissions or waste, and is completely safe, even if struck by an  earthquake.</p>
<p>A large part of China&#8217;s fusion research is now focused on the tokamak, a Russian acronym meaning &#8220;toroidal magnetic chamber&#8221;.</p>
<p>It is a doughnut-shaped vacuum vessel wrapped in  superconducting magnetic coils that confine and control the ultra-high  temperature soup of ions and electrons known as plasma.</p>
<p>But tokamaks can only run a few seconds in experiments  conducted every five months or so, creating a brief 500-megawatt burst  of energy before fizzling out.</p>
<p>Unlike the tokamak, new conventional technologies are on  the cusp of being commercialised, including &#8220;third-generation&#8221; designs  imported from US-based Westinghouse, owned by Toshiba, and France&#8217;s  Areva.</p>
<p>Also on the horizon are fourth and fifth-generation  technologies that go by names such as fast-breeder, travelling wave, or  high-temperature gas-cooled, as well as small and versatile &#8220;modular&#8221;  reactors with shorter construction times.</p>
<p>&#8220;[China] has investments in the more exotic reactor  designs and they also have got co-operation on fast reactors with the  Russians,&#8221; said Mr Kidd of the World Nuclear Association. &#8220;They are  keeping their options open, and Fukushima will encourage that tendency  toward next-generation reactors.&#8221;</p>
<p>The allure of the next generation reactors is they can  eliminate, or at least defer, the problem of fuel shortages by  reprocessing spent uranium into plutonium and other actinides and boost  the amount of usable fuel by a factor of 50.</p>
<p>Like fusion, some of these advanced reactors remain a  long way from the market, said Adrian Heymer, executive director at the  Nuclear Energy Institute in Washington, DC.</p>
<p>High-temperature gas-cooled reactors are unlikely to be ready until 2030, and fast breeders could have to wait until the 2040s.</p>
<p>&#8220;When we say future, we are really looking at the distant  future &#8211; they not only need a step forward in technology but certainly  also a step-up in operator acumen,&#8221; Mr Heymer said.</p>
<p>The nuclear debate, Mr Kidd says, needs to focus more on the commercial application of current technologies.</p>
<p>&#8220;The nuclear industry&#8217;s reaction, whenever there is a  problem, is to try to find technical solutions rather than business  solutions, which is the way any other industry would deal with it.&#8221;</p>
<p>Non-mainstream technology is a diversion, he said, and  China needs to focus on the task in hand: getting a new generation of  reactors into commercial operation for the first time.</p>
<p>&#8220;What the industry has to do now is build a large number  of third-generation units around the world, bring costs down and  establish a global supply chain that will allow costs to be cut.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Fission mission</strong></p>
<p>All the discussions about Professor Duan&#8217;s &#8220;artificial  sun&#8221; seemed ironic in the April gloom of Chengdu in China&#8217;s rainswept  Sichuan basin, where industry representatives met to talk about the  long-term prospects for nuclear power.</p>
<p>They were originally lined up to celebrate the country&#8217;s  rapid capacity build-up and the extraordinary leaps expected over the  next decade. Now they had to come to terms with the worst crisis to hit  the industry in a quarter-century.</p>
<p>For the first time in years, China&#8217;s bullish nuclear  firms were on the back foot. Tang Hongju, the head of the nuclear  division of the Chengdu-based Dongfang Electric, one of China&#8217;s biggest  nuclear equipment manufacturers, tried gamely to put it in the best  light.</p>
<p>&#8220;The fact that we could have this conference and invite  so many experts after the Fukushima accident shows how much confidence  there still is in the Chinese nuclear sector.&#8221;</p>
<p>Some worried about profits in the coming year.</p>
<p>&#8220;We are actually quite worried about a slowdown in  orders,&#8221; said a representative with another supplier. &#8220;There is still a  lot of uncertainty because in the end it all depends on what the  government decides. Right now we have no idea what it will be.&#8221;</p>
<p>Before March 11, the world was awaiting a bold 2020  capacity target of 85 GW, more than doubling the previous 40 GW figure.  The two big plant builders, CNNC and the China Guangdong Nuclear Power  Corporation (CGNPC), said 100 GW would be possible.</p>
<p>Even before Fukushima, some urged caution. The State  Council Research Office published a paper in January saying China needed  to rein in the overexuberant nuclear sector and keep the target at  around 70 GW.</p>
<p>&#8220;There was a lot of hot air about a &#8216;nuclear renaissance&#8217;  in the last few years and the credibility of it was getting lower &#8211;  Fukushima actually provides an excuse to slow down a bit.&#8221;</p>
<p>Beijing has not yet published new targets, but Xue  Xinmin, a researcher with the NDRC&#8217;s Energy Research Institute, said it  was now likely to be scaled back to around 70-80 GW.</p>
<p>He said a slowdown would give China time to improve its  regulatory system, train personnel and build manufacturing capacity,  thus ensuring the industry&#8217;s long-term strength.</p>
<p>Official corruption is another concern. Last November,  the CNNC chief was jailed for life for taking bribes and abuse of power,  raising questions about the integrity of policy-making at the top of  the industry.</p>
<p><strong>Optimism</strong></p>
<p>Despite the uncertainties, optimism continues to prevail &#8211;  and some insiders suggested Fukushima could actually cement China&#8217;s  future dominance of the sector.</p>
<p>&#8220;The Japan accident could be good for China,&#8221; said one  industry official who didn&#8217;t want to be identified in order to speak  more candidly.</p>
<p>&#8220;It will force China to move forward technologically and  pay even more attention to safety. But it will also lead to a bigger  slowdown in nuclear development in other countries. China can really  gain the upper hand.&#8221;</p>
<p>China has already committed itself to investing $1.5  trillion in seven strategic industries, including nuclear and high-speed  rail.</p>
<p>Its plans to push into high-tech sectors prompted US  President Barack Obama to call for a &#8220;Sputnik moment&#8221; aimed at ensuring  that the United States doesn&#8217;t fall behind.</p>
<p>Even the lower target of 70 GW is still a huge leap from  10.8 today, and China could very quickly return to &#8220;business as usual  Kidd said.</p>
<p>While many predicted the safety review after Fukushima  would cause project approvals to be suspended for at least a year, now  the expectation is for the pipeline to start moving again in August.</p>
<p>Dozens of plants are waiting to be built.</p>
<p>&#8220;Obviously, there will be some delays, but I don&#8217;t think  there are any implications for those projects already under construction  &#8211; and there are 27 of those, which is enough to be going along with,&#8221;  said Kidd.</p>
<p><strong>Fukushima nightmare</strong></p>
<p>Parts of China are prone to earthquakes, such as the  8.0-magnitude quake that flattened several towns in Sichuan in 2008,  killing 80,000 people.</p>
<p>The quake did no harm to nuclear power plants, sparing China a Fukushima-style nightmare.</p>
<p>But it damaged beyond repair a turbine manufacturing unit  belonging to one of China&#8217;s biggest nuclear equipment makers, Dongfang  Electric, at a loss of 1.6 billion yuan.</p>
<p>Since then, the company has recovered, building and expanding facilities in quake-damaged Deyang and elsewhere.</p>
<p>Despite misgivings among the public, the quake didn&#8217;t  stop nearby cities &#8211; including the megapolis of Chongqing &#8211; from pushing  ahead with their own reactor plans.</p>
<p>Chinese netizens have expressed concerns about the  projects, and after Fukushima some accused local officials of putting  prestige and profit ahead of public safety.</p>
<p>&#8220;The people of Sichuan should unite and together resist  the shameful act of building a nuclear power station in Sichuan,&#8221; said  one comment on an internet site (www.mala.cn) used to discuss local  issues in the province.</p>
<p>Existing nuclear projects are clustered on China&#8217;s  eastern coast, but the government has identified nuclear power as a  crucial part of efforts to reduce coal dependence and boost energy  supplies in poor and polluted interior regions.</p>
<p>Beijing said shortly before the Japan crisis that China&#8217;s  first inland plant would begin construction within two years, and  Sichuan was among a number of provinces hoping to be in the first pick.</p>
<p>A lot is at stake. Sichuan officials said apart from  Dongfang Electric, more than 30 companies in the province were preparing  for the projects, which have not been given the final go-ahead by the  central government.</p>
<p>Critics of nuclear power suggest all the &#8220;inland&#8221; nuclear  plans should be torn up in light of the Japan crisis, and not just  because of the potential earthquake risks.</p>
<p>&#8220;China has a huge variety of natural disasters &#8211; this is a  country vulnerable to extreme weather and the government needs to take  into consideration all the worst-case scenarios,&#8221; said Li Yan, China  campaign manager with Greenpeace.</p>
<p>Nuclear supporters see a massive overreaction to Fukushima.</p>
<p>&#8220;The safety requirements for inland nuclear power plants  are no different from those on the coast &#8211; the key consideration is  water supply and environmental capacity,&#8221; said Li Xiaoxue, an official  in charge of new reactor projects at CGNPC.</p>
<p>Kidd of the World Nuclear Association said plants in  earthquake-prone regions could be scaled back, but that was no reason to  ban all inland projects.</p>
<p>&#8220;Some of the regions have seismic problems and as a  consequence of Fukushima there may be less of a rush to go to some of  these areas, including Sichuan, but otherwise there&#8217;s no particular good  reason not to build them,&#8221; he said.</p>
<p><strong>Generation gap</strong></p>
<p>Li of CGNPC caused a stir at the Chengdu conference when  he said China could halt approvals for new second-generation plants &#8211;  similar to the Fukushima Daiichi plant &#8211; after Japan&#8217;s disaster. He also  wondered whether China was ready to make the big leap into  third-generation technology.</p>
<p>The company later denied Li had made those statements.  But even if China does go ahead with some second-generation plants among  the many projects pending approval, the Japan crisis is likely to  strengthen its prior commitment to third-generation reactors such as the  AP1000 and Areva&#8217;s EPR.</p>
<p>&#8220;China was heading that way anyway,&#8221; said Kidd. &#8220;They see  the AP1000, or derivations of the AP1000, as the way forward. I think  they have looked at it and said if they can build it properly, it will  be cheaper.&#8221;</p>
<p>At Sanmen on the east coast, China is building the  world&#8217;s first AP1000, a model designed by Westinghouse to withstand the  sort of catastrophic strains that struck the Fukushima complex.</p>
<p>China isn&#8217;t just building Westinghouse&#8217;s new  third-generation model, it is also absorbing the technology in a  strategy aimed at seizing the global initiative in the industry and  building an entire industrial chain with a global reach.</p>
<p>Technology transfers from Westinghouse and others will  allow China to create its own reactor brands. CNNC is talking to foreign  partners about selling them abroad.</p>
<p>&#8220;Many of the technologies have already been basically  localised,&#8221; said Xue, the NDRC researcher. Reactors now under  construction could rely on domestic manufacturers for around 80-85 per  cent of their components and equipment, he said.</p>
<p>&#8220;We are localising advanced technologies in order to  enter the global market &#8211; China must become a nuclear exporting country  and exporting reactors must be a part of our national strategy.&#8221;</p>
<p>China is emulating South Korea, which signed a similar  technology transfer agreement in 1987 and is building its own reactors  in the United Arab Emirates.</p>
<p>&#8220;With the transfer of technology, the Chinese will have  the wherewithal to move ahead with similar designs, and by the time they  get to unit 10 they are going to be pretty much self-sufficient,&#8221; said  Heymer of the Nuclear Energy Institute.</p>
<p>&#8220;It could mean that by 2020-2025 they will be up and running themselves and could be a competitor,&#8221; he said.</p>
<p><strong>Breaking even</strong></p>
<p>Back at his lab in Chengdu, Professor Duan remains  optimistic about the long-term prospects for fusion, particularly when  the pressures of climate change begin to intensify.</p>
<p>Professor Duan heads a team of 200 people, up from just a  few dozen in the 1980s when fusion researchers were struggling to  convince their paymasters the technology was feasible.</p>
<p>In recent years, Beijing has offer more funds, partly to  meet its commitments to a fusion project known as the international  thermonuclear experimental reactor, or ITER.</p>
<p>&#8220;Now it is much better than before,&#8221; Professor Duan said.  &#8220;One reason is energy security. Another is political: we joined the  ITER project.&#8221;</p>
<p>China joined the European Union, Russia, Japan and the  United States in ITER in 2003. With India and South Korea also on board,  the project aims to produce a working fusion reactor by 2019. The  countries will share the project&#8217;s costs, expected to run to €10  billion.</p>
<p>Fusion is far behind fission in terms of development and  far more reliant on international cooperation, at least while the  technology is in its infancy. China, which has shown it can leverage its  nuclear might to get know-how from Westinghouse and Areva, could be  equally hard-headed if fusion looks like is paying off.</p>
<p>While the fusion research community has no secrets now,  Professor Duan said, labs like his could start to go their own way if  big breakthroughs are made.</p>
<p>A number of labs &#8211; including the Joint European Torus  (JET) in Abingdon near Oxford in the United Kingdom &#8211; have come close to  a crucial breakthrough: getting more power out of the reactor than they  put in, a ratio known as Q or &#8220;breakeven&#8221;. ITER is likely to lift Q  from less than 1 to more than 10 within 20 years.</p>
<p>The Q ratio is a starker, more scientific version of the  sort of cost-benefit analysis that is brought to all forms of energy,  including conventional nuclear power.</p>
<p>For the industry&#8217;s inveterate opponents, benefits will  always be outweighed by costs. But as China scours the planet for the  scarce resources needed to meet the energy demand of more than 1.3  billion people, nuclear is seen as fundamental.</p>
<p>During his travels around the nuclear conference circuit,  Kidd said he had identified as many as 20 separate excuses why nuclear  power shouldn&#8217;t be developed, but in the end, the fundamental problem  facing the sector is cost.</p>
<p>It is a problem China is in the best position to solve.</p>
<p>&#8220;They have a wonderful opportunity to show what they can do and the key thing they can bring to the world is lower costs.&#8221;</p>
<p>Whether China can eventually do the same for fusion  remains to be seen, and until it is finally commercialized, China and  the rest of the world have little choice but to endure all the costs and  risks that arise from splitting the atom.</p>
<p>Professor Duan has dedicated his adult life to fusion  research, and he still isn&#8217;t sure if he will see a commercially viable  reactor in his lifetime.</p>
<p>&#8220;It is difficult to say,&#8221; he said ruefully.</p>
<p>&#8220;I believe we will have a fusion power plant within 50 years, but I don&#8217;t know if I will still be here to see it.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Reuters</strong></p>
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		<title>CHINA TO LAUNCH ITS OWN INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION</title>
		<link>http://www.sciencearticlesonline.com/2011/04/china-to-launch-its-own-international-space-station/</link>
		<comments>http://www.sciencearticlesonline.com/2011/04/china-to-launch-its-own-international-space-station/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Apr 2011 09:53:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Editor</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[China unveils rival to International Space Station April 27, 2011 &#8211; 10:06AM Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/technology/sci-tech/china-unveils-rival-to-international-space-station-20110427-1dvmp.html#ixzz1KiQcoVvn Less than a decade ago, it fired its first human being into orbit. Now, Beijing is working on a multi-capsule outpost in space. But what is the political message of the Tiangong &#8216;heavenly palace&#8217;? China has laid out plans for [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>China unveils rival to</h1>
<h1>International Space Station</h1>
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<div><cite>April 27, 2011 &#8211; 10:06AM</cite></div>
<div><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1925" title="chinaspacestation-90x60" src="http://www.sciencearticlesonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/chinaspacestation-90x60.jpg" alt="" width="90" height="60" /></div>
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<p>Read more: <a href="http://www.smh.com.au/technology/sci-tech/china-unveils-rival-to-international-space-station-20110427-1dvmp.html#ixzz1KiQcoVvn">http://www.smh.com.au/technology/sci-tech/china-unveils-rival-to-international-space-station-20110427-1dvmp.html#ixzz1KiQcoVvn</a></p>
<p><strong>Less than a decade ago, it fired its first  human being into orbit. Now, Beijing is working on a multi-capsule  outpost in space. But what is the political message of the Tiangong  &#8216;heavenly palace&#8217;? </strong></p>
<p>China has laid out plans for its future in space,  unveiling details of an ambitious new space station to be built in orbit  within a decade.</p>
<p>The project, which one Nasa adviser describes as a  &#8220;potent political symbol&#8221;, is the latest phase in China&#8217;s rapidly  developing space programme. It is less than a decade since China put a  human into orbit for the first time, and three years since its first  spacewalk.</p>
<p>The space station will weigh around 60 tonnes and consist  of a core module with two laboratory units for experiments, according  to the state news agency, Xinhua. <noscript><br />
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<p>Officials have asked the public to suggest names and symbols for the unit and for a cargo spacecraft that will serve it.</p>
<p>Professor Jiang Guohua, from the China Astronaut Research  and Training Centre, said the facility would be designed to last for  around a decade and support three astronauts working on microgravity  science, space radiation biology and astronomy.</p>
<p>The project heralds a shift in the balance of power among  spacefaring nations. In June, the US space agency, Nasa, will mothball  its whole fleet of space shuttles, in a move that will leave only the  Russians capable of ferrying astronauts to and from the International  Space Station. The $US100bn outpost is itself due to fly only until  2020, but may be granted a reprieve until 2028.</p>
<p>Bernardo Patti, head of the space station programme at  the European Space Agency (Esa), said: &#8220;China is a big country. It is a  powerful country, and they are getting richer and richer. They want to  establish themselves as key players in the international arena.</p>
<p>&#8220;They have decided politically that they want to be  autonomous, and that is their call. They must have had some political  evaluation that suggests this option is better than the others, and I  would think autonomy is the key word.&#8221;</p>
<p>He added that China&#8217;s plans would be &#8220;food for thought&#8221;  for policymakers elsewhere. Esa and other nations are already discussing  a next-generation space station that would operate as a base from which  to explore space beyond low-Earth orbit; future missions could return  astronauts to the moon, land them on asteroids, or venture further  afield to Mars.</p>
<p>&#8220;Another country trying to build its own infrastructure  in space is competition, and competition always pushes you to be  better,&#8221; Patti said.</p>
<p>The central module of the Chinese space station will be  18.1 metres long, with a maximum diameter of 4.2 metres and a launch  weight of 20 to 22 tonnes. The laboratory modules will be shorter, at  14.4 metres, but will have the same diameter and launch weight.</p>
<p>Pang Zhihao, a researcher and deputy editor-in-chief of  the magazine Space International, told Xinhua: &#8220;The 60-tonne space  station is rather small compared with the International Space Station  [419 tonnes] and Russia&#8217;s Mir space station [137 tonnes], which served  between 1996 and 2001.</p>
<p>&#8220;But it is the world&#8217;s third multi-module space station,  which usually demands much more complicated technology than a  single-module space lab.&#8221;</p>
<p>China is also developing a cargo spaceship, which will  weigh less than 13 tonnes and have a diameter of no more than 3.35  metres, to transport supplies and equipment to the space station.</p>
<p>John Logsdon, a Nasa adviser and former director of the  Space Policy Institute at George Washington University, said China&#8217;s  plans would give it homegrown expertise in human space flight. &#8220;China  wants to say: &#8216;We can do everything in space that other major countries  can do,&#8221;&#8216; he said. &#8220;A significant, and probably visible, orbital outpost  transiting over most of the world would be a potent political symbol.&#8221;</p>
<p>China often chooses poetic names for its space projects,  such as Chang&#8217;e &#8211; after the moon goddess &#8211; for its lunar probes; its  rocket series, however, is named Long March, in tribute to communist  history. The space station project is currently referred to as Tiangong,  or &#8220;heavenly palace&#8221;.</p>
<p>But Wang Wenbao, director of the China Manned Space  Engineering Office, told a news conference: &#8220;Considering past  achievements and the bright future, we feel the manned space programme  should have a more vivid symbol, and that the future space station  should carry a resounding and encouraging name.</p>
<p>&#8220;We now feel that the public should be involved in the  names and symbols, as this major project will enhance national prestige  and strengthen the national sense of cohesion and pride.&#8221;</p>
<p>China plans to launch the Tiangong-1 module later this  year, to help master docking technologies. An unpiloted spacecraft will  attempt to dock with the module; two piloted spacecraft will then follow  suit.</p>
<p>Wang Zhaoyao, spokesman for the programme, said  researchers were developing technology to ensure astronauts could remain  in space for at least 20 days and to ensure supplies could be delivered  safely.</p>
<p>According to Space.com, Jiang, the chief engineer at the  China Astronaut Research and Training Centre, in Beijing, told an  international conference last month: &#8220;The rendezvous and docking project  is smoothly going through technical preparations and testing.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Tiangong-2 should support three astronauts for around  20 days, while the Tiangong-3, which is due for launch in 2015, should  support them for twice as long. The laboratories would allow China to  develop the technology it needs to build the space station.</p>
<p>Jiang added that China aimed to increase international  exchanges, and that the hardware from the current rendezvous and docking  project is compatible with the International Space Station.</p>
<p>&#8220;We will adhere to the policy of opening up to the  outside world,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Scientists of all countries are welcome to  participate in space science experimental research on China&#8217;s space  station.&#8221;</p>
<p>China hopes to make its first moon landing within two years and to put an astronaut on the moon as early as 2025.</p>
<p><strong><em></em>The Guardian</strong></p>
<div><strong>Sourced &amp; published by Henry Sapiecha</strong></div>
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		<title>CHINA IS A MANUFACTURER BUT NOT YET AN INVENTOR</title>
		<link>http://www.sciencearticlesonline.com/2010/06/china-is-a-manufacturer-but-not-yet-an-inventor/</link>
		<comments>http://www.sciencearticlesonline.com/2010/06/china-is-a-manufacturer-but-not-yet-an-inventor/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Jun 2010 10:50:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Editor</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CHINA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[INVENTIONS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MANUFACTURING]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[RESOURCES]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[china buys technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[china leads world in manufacturing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[china needs technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[chinese made goods]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[China&#8217;s Coming Age Of Invention Rebecca Fannin, 06.07.10, 06:00 AM EDT Now, everything is made in China&#8211; but little is invented there. When will the familiar label &#8220;Made in China&#8221; switch to something more challenging: &#8220;Invented in China&#8221;? Not for another decade at least, according to investors and technology entrepreneurs who gathered recently at an [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>China&#8217;s Coming Age Of Invention</h1>
<p><cite><a href="http://search.forbes.com/search/colArchiveSearch?author=rebecca+and+fannin&amp;aname=Rebecca+Fannin">Rebecca  Fannin</a></cite>, 06.07.10, 06:00 AM EDT</p>
<h2>Now, everything is made in China&#8211;</h2>
<h2>but little is  invented there.</h2>
<p><img src="http://images.forbes.com/media/2010/02/08/0208_rebecca-fannin_170x170.jpg" alt="image" width="75" height="75" /><a href="http://www.sciencearticlesonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/china_fl_md_wht.gif"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1361" title="china_fl_md_wht" src="http://www.sciencearticlesonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/china_fl_md_wht.gif" alt="" width="68" height="50" /></a><a href="http://www.sciencearticlesonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/4ClimateNSW_400x300.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-1362" title="CLIMATE POWER EMISSIONS STOCK" src="http://www.sciencearticlesonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/4ClimateNSW_400x300-300x225.jpg" alt="" width="101" height="75" /></a></p>
<p>When will the familiar label &#8220;Made in  China&#8221; switch to something more challenging: &#8220;Invented in China&#8221;? Not  for another decade at least, according to investors and technology  entrepreneurs who gathered recently at an event in Beijing to discuss  the topic. (For video of the event, <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PflvUVq4NC0" target="_blank">click  here</a>.)</p>
<p>Sure, some things are already being invented in China.  Internet whizzes have pushed advances in mobile gaming and instant  messaging. But many obstacles prevent a full-scale leap into widespread  inventing.</p>
<p>One hurdle is culture. Entrepreneurs in  China are still afraid of failure, noted Feng Deng of Northern Light  Venture Capital. A failed startup in <a rel="nofollow" href="http://topics.forbes.com/Silicon%20Valley">Silicon  Valley</a> is practically a badge of honor. In addition, entrepreneurs  in China may be good at coding software, but they make for lousy  managers. That often keeps their businesses from scaling.</p>
<p>Innovation  in China comes largely by accident, not by design, said DCM investor  Hurst Lin, one of the first generation of China&#8217;s returnee entrepreneurs  from the West and co-founder of Chinese Internet portal Sina. Facebook  and <a href="http://finapps.forbes.com/finapps/jsp/finance/compinfo/CIAtAGlance.jsp?tkr=GOOG"><strong>Google</strong></a> (       <a href="http://finapps.forbes.com/finapps/jsp/finance/compinfo/CIAtAGlance.jsp?tkr=GOOG">GOOG</a> &#8211; 	<a href="http://search.forbes.com/search/CompanyNewsSearch?ticker=GOOG"> news </a> &#8211;     <a href="http://people.forbes.com/search?ticker=GOOG"> people </a>) were accidents of imagination that was allowed to roam and  think differently. Such breakthrough ideas could not have been the  result of an upbringing in China, said Lin, where education needs to  move toward critical thinking and away from sheer memorization.</p>
<p>Even  so, Lin and others (including myself) hold out hope&#8211;and the  expectation&#8211;that China will climb the innovation ladder quickly. Why?  Necessity is the mother of invention. Many of the country&#8217;s 1.3 billion  people are yearning for middle-class living standards and the cars and  consumer goods that go with it. The market for homegrown innovation is  there.</p>
<p>Major and rapid developments  are coming in clean tech&#8211;an area that Northern Light&#8217;s Deng is focusing  on with bets in energy-efficient lights, wind power and energy storage.  Let&#8217;s hope some of these ideas can clean up China&#8217;s polluted cities.<br />
 <script type="text/javascript">// <![CDATA[
// <![CDATA[
rtsUtil.addRtsBox('rateStoryP2',{source_type:"story",source_id:"2010/06/06/pfizer-ipad-invention-intelligent-technology-china.html"});
// ]]&gt;</script>Before China&#8217;s tech hubs join the same league as Silicon  Valley, however, the country needs more collaboration among university  labs and venture capital firms to work on breakthrough ideas. This  method has worked well in Silicon Valley and in Boston. In Shanghai and  Beijing I&#8217;m told that professors and scientists prefer not to share  their intellectual capital with financiers.</p>
<p>Still, corporations  worldwide are pouring more investment into Chinese R&amp;D operations  every day, a point made by Egidio Zarrella of KPMG.</p>
<p>One example  is corporate America&#8217;s interest in Chinese biomedical research and  development&#8211;an area of investment that is rapidly becoming as hot as  clean tech. <a href="http://finapps.forbes.com/finapps/jsp/finance/compinfo/CIAtAGlance.jsp?tkr=PFE"><strong>Pfizer</strong></a> (       <a href="http://finapps.forbes.com/finapps/jsp/finance/compinfo/CIAtAGlance.jsp?tkr=PFE">PFE</a> &#8211; 	<a href="http://search.forbes.com/search/CompanyNewsSearch?ticker=PFE"> news </a> &#8211;     <a href="http://people.forbes.com/search?ticker=PFE"> people </a>) recently established a joint venture with Crown Bioscience to  work on finding a cure for cancers common in Asia&#8211;predominantly <a rel="nofollow" href="http://topics.forbes.com/lung%20cancer">lung cancer</a>. While in Beijing, I got a tour of Crown  Bioscience, which is located in an immense life sciences park close to  the Great Wall.</p>
<p><strong>Sourced and published by Henry Sapiecha 7th June 2010</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.sciencearticlesonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/fine-gold-line.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-1314" title="fine gold line" src="http://www.sciencearticlesonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/fine-gold-line-300x4.jpg" alt="" width="517" height="4" /></a></p>
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