Hu Jintao (R), general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC)
Central Committee, Chinese president and chairman of the Central Military
Commission (CMC), presents the top award to Li Zhensheng, an academician of the
Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) during the annual National Science-Technology
Prize Awarding Ceremony in Beijing, capital of China, on Feb. 27, 2007. China
granted its State Scientific and Technological Awards to Scientists and
Enterprises that have made remarkable progress in technological innovation on
Tuesday. Senior leaders Hu Jintao, Wen Jiabao, Zeng Qinghong and Li Changchun
attended the event and presented the awards. (Xinhua/Ju Peng)
BEIJING, Feb. 27 (Xinhua) -- China granted its State Scientific
and Technological Award for 2006 here Tuesday to scientist Li Zhensheng for his
achievements in wheat breeding. Li is the tenth Chinese scientist to win this
top award.
Chinese president Hu Jintao, with other senior leaders, presented the top
award to Li and other prizes to prominent scientists and enterprises that have
made remarkable progress in technological innovation at the annual national
science-technology prize awarding ceremony Tuesday.
Li was awarded five million yuan (about 600,000 U.S.dollars) at the
ceremony, including 500,000 yuan for himself and 4.5 million for his research.
Li, born in 1931 in east China's Shandong Province, is an academician of
the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS). He has developed fine strains of wheat
through distant hybridization and contributed to China's food security.
"Science and technology plays a fundamental role in the country's
modernization process," said Premier Wen Jiabao at the ceremony, adding the
working and living conditions of scientists should be improved.
Wen highlighted the importance of strengthening science and technology
education in primary and middle schools and encouraging the innovative spirit of
students.
The top science prize winner Li successfully developed the fine wheat
strain "Xiaoyan No. 6" in 1979 that features drought endurance, heat
withstanding and disease resistance. "Xiaoyan" series greatly boosted the
country's crop production in following years.
Li has also introduced chromosome engineering to the breeding of wheat
strains with a "nullisomic backcross method", which has reduced the duration of
wheat breeding through distant hybridization to 3.5 years, whereas the previous
breeding of "Xiaoyan" lasted 20 years.
The project of China's third-generation fighter aircraft Jian-10
(Fighter-10) won a top technological progress award.
The fighter aircraft, developed by the China Aviation Industry Corporation
I (AVIC I) after seven years of work, marks a breakthrough in China's research
and development of heavy fighter aircraft.
With proprietary intellectual property rights (IPR), the Jian-10 heralds
the third generation of Chinese fighter aircraft.
Military observers say the Jian-10 can not match the United States'
fourth-generation fighter aircraft in performance but its basic design and
onboard equipment are comparable to those of mainstream fighter aircraft in the
West.
The award winners also included workers and farmers. One employee of
Shanghai Baosteel Group, one employee from FAW-VOLKSWAGEN Co. Ltd and an
entrepreneurial farmer from central China's Henan Province shared second prize
for the technological progress award for technical innovations.
Innovations from private enterprises accounted for more than 30percent of
the total number of prize winners.
Che Chi-Ming from Hong Kong University won a first prize for his excellency
in the research of metal ions promoted organic transformations. It was the first
time Hong Kong scientist won the state science prize.
Senior leaders Zeng Qinghong and Li Changchun also attended the event and
presented the awards.
The ceremony was jointly held by the Central Committee of the Communist
Party of China and the State Council. More than 3,000 science workers attended
the event.
Since the State Scientific and Technological Award was established in 2000,
ten Chinese scientists have received the five-million-yuan top award, including
atmospheric physicist Ye Duzheng, a liver and gall specialist Wu Mengchao,
hybrid rice developer Yuan Longping, mathematician Wu Wenjun and IT expert Wang
Xuan.
Last year, China's total R&D spending reached 300 billion yuan (38.5
billion U.S. dollars), an increase of 22 percent over the previous year, which
accounted for a record 1.4 percent of the country's gross domestic product
(GDP).
The country's R&D spending should reach two percent of the GDP in 2010,
according to the 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-2010).

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao delivers a speech at the annual
national science-technology prize awarding ceremony in Beijing, Feb. 27, 2007.
(Xinhua Photo)

Scientist Li Zhensheng delivers a speech at the annual national
science-technology prize awarding ceremony in Beijing, Feb. 27, 2007. (Xinhua
Photo)

Chinese senior leaders and representatives of prize winners pose
for a group photo before the annual National Science-Technology Prize Awarding
Ceremony held in Beijing, capital of China, on Feb. 27, 2007.(Xinhua/Li Xueren
Photo)