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Japan to help train 10,000 Chinese on energy-saving technologies
BEIJING—Japan will help China
train 10,000 people on energy-saving and environmental protection
technologies, said visiting Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda here on
Friday.
“Japan has accumulated a lot of experience in improving the energy
efficiency that can be shared with China,” said Fukuda during a speech
at the prestigious Peking University. He told the students he had very
candid talks with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and the topics covered a
wide scope, including personnel and technological exchange.
“Fortunately, Japan has started to tackle environmental problems
seriously from an early date ... and is now one of the most efficient
users of energy resources in the world,” Fukuda said, noting his country
would make every effort to assist China in this field. The two sides had
already signed a cooperation document on climate change and issued a
joint communique on technology transfer in the environmental and energy
sectors.
The training of 10,000 Chinese on energy-saving and environmental
protection technologies would be completed in three years starting from
2008, according to the communique. Joint research and projects on
emission cutting, greenhouse reduction and sandstorm control would also
be improved.
Japan would help China check and upgrade energy-saving technologies in
the steel, cement and thermal power industries. The two sides would also
cooperate in water pollution control in major river valleys, such as the
Yangtze, and in the new city development mode based on the “recycled
economy”, it said.
The two sides would strengthen cooperation in forestry administration as
well as wild training and nature returning of crested ibises so as to
help maintain bio-diversity in the Asia-Pacific region and in the world,
it said. The document on climate change featured exchanges of related
scientific technologies, with about 50 Chinese young researchers to be
invited to visit Japan annually in the following four years.
Cooperation in scientific technologies, part of the joint efforts to
build the “strategic and mutually beneficial China-Japan relations”,
could play a key role in coping with climate change as they may help cut
waste, promote energy recycling and develop new energy resources, the
document said. Premier Wen held talks with Fukuda for 2.5 hours on
Friday morning and the two witnessed the signing of three cooperation
documents in fields of youth exchange, technical cooperation on climate
change, and a new joint research on magnetic fusion energy.
Fukuda arrived in Beijing on Thursday afternoon for the start of an
official visit which runs through Sunday.—Xinhua |