China rejected the effects of Trump's policy on its scientific research

The Chinese government is reviewing the effects of US President Donald Trump’s decisions related to the stop of financing for some US agencies and the publication of certain groups information on scientific research in the country. According to soothing people who asked not to reveal their identity because of the sensitivity of the subject, and because the information is not public, several Chinese ministries and bodies have begun to evaluate the possible disorders of their work over the past few weeks, trying to determine the extent to which some of its activities depend on the data the United States publishes. According to one of the persons, the bodies that do these reviews include both the ‘Chinese Academy of Sciences’, the ‘Chinese Meteorological Division’, the Ministry of Natural Resources and the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, according to one of the persons. Another person explained that one of the areas facing a potential disturbance is studies on coral dislike in the South China Sea. The Chinese researchers relied on a product of the product “National Oceanic and Atmospheric and Calgianization” (NOAA) publishing the coastal temperature data before being suspended last month, he said. The attempt to restore relations on its right path comes this development at a time when Beijing and Washington try to recover bilateral relations on the right path, after the negotiators agreed on a framework to alleviate trade tensions and resume the flow of sensitive goods between the two largest economies in the world. But the details of this agreement are still rare, and many issues remain stuck, including China’s great trade surplus with the United States. According to people, the ongoing reviews in the Chinese ministries will be studied or replaced by US data that is not available now, with local sources. These assessments are being made quietly to prevent the United States from giving any additional negotiation paper. The ‘Chinese Academy of Sciences’, or the ‘Meteorological Department’, or the Ministry of Natural Resources, or the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs did not respond to suspension requests. Beijing has reduced its dependence on foreign technology, Beijing has been sought over the past few years to reduce its dependence on foreign sources of technology and biological products. Previous US criteria have accelerated the pressure of China after self -sufficiency, just as US restrictions on electronic chips stimulated the growth of the local semiconductor sector in the country. China regards climate science as a field of geopolitical conflict. President Xi Jinping is looking for his country to become a superpower in the field of meteorology, and to play a greater role in climate management at the global level. Between 2013 and 2023, Beijing increased its spending on ‘climate diplomacy’ by about 500%, as part of a well -known strategy that includes providing financial support to other countries to improve the use of Chinese technology and services. On the other hand, hairstyles for employees and the reduction of funding in the United States have led to the impact of data collection and its availability in areas such as climate, weather and health. Hundreds of employees of the “National Oceanic and Air Force and Calph Administration” have been demobilized as part of the Trump administration’s efforts to reduce the size of the federal government. The consequences on other countries that the US administration of the ocean and the atmosphere refused to comment on the removal of some products and data from their websites that influenced the collaboration with other countries, including China. But she said that data from the coastal water temperature is still available in other formats. The White House issued no response to a request for comment. Craig McLean, a researcher in the ocean sciences who worked in the ‘US National Oceanic and Attrads’, said decades before his retirement in 2022. He added that without the original presentation ‘the journey could be more complicated’ for anyone trying to use and understand information. The Australian Strategic Policy Institute indicated last month that reducing research and information exchange in the United States will also affect partners from Europe to Australia, in areas such as astronomy, physics, public health and weather monitoring. The growing criticism of China was not the United States alone that used to reduce the amount of data available to the public, as China increases increasing criticism to tighten its grip on sensitive information, limiting the ability of economists, research centers, financial analysts and others to access data. The restrictions included corporate databases, bond market transactions, official self -biographies and academic research. In 2023, the local data industry “Wind Information Co.” ‘has stopped providing detailed information about local companies to foreign customers, while the Ministry of State Security has repeated warnings issued that foreign entities collect sensitive data, such as food production, geography and weather patterns, by computer programs, NGOs and Chinese citizens without their knowledge. China has renewed a history of collaboration with US federal scientific agencies, including the ‘US National Oceanic and Calgon Administration’, which last year a treaty signed for the first time in 1979, including cooperation in various areas. The Chinese researchers have often praised the accuracy and inclusiveness of US data, as the Chinese meteorological department said in 2017 that US forecasts are the best in the world.