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South China Morning Post
16-07-2025
- Business
- South China Morning Post
China's engagement in the Arctic is part and parcel of being a global power
A report and interactive map from Harvard University's Belfer Centre for Science and International Affairs, 'Cutting Through Narratives on Chinese Arctic Investments', published last month and co-authored by an international team of scholars argues that China's presence in the Arctic has been exaggerated by numerous analysts and commentators. This much-needed breath of fresh air generated a healthy – if short-lived and industry- and geographically concentrated – rise in scepticism of the conventional but false narrative on China's activities in the Arctic region. The Harvard University report says that 'Chinese Arctic ambitions and activities are contentious' and analysts in the seven Arctic states 'often frame Chinese investments in an adversarial way, describing Chinese activity in alarmist language in terms of scale, scope and risk'. The study points to a tendency to mix proposed investments with actual investments. It finds that the figures supporting these claims are inflated and include unsuccessful investment projects and proposals that have not been implemented. It cites Greenland as an example: despite Greenland emerging as the centre of debate about Chinese investments in the Arctic, much of the anxiety concerns what might happen rather than what has transpired. The report notes that most Chinese investments in the Arctic were concluded several years ago and that recent Chinese investments have been met with resistance among Arctic nations, with the notable exception of Russia. Ever since China released a white paper in January 2018 that outlined its Arctic policy, the West has been seemingly obsessed with a supposed China threat to the Arctic. In the US Defence Department 's 2024 Arctic strategy document, the Pentagon seemed to drink this Kool-Aid. China was placed atop the department's threat hierarchy for the region, likely elevated for ideological and budgetary rationalisations rather than as a result of objective strategic analysis. US Vice-President J.D. Vance arrives at the US military's Pituffik Space Base in Greenland on March 28. Photo: AFP/Getty Images/TNS


South China Morning Post
05-06-2025
- Business
- South China Morning Post
US still reigns over China in tech race, but gaps are quickly closing: Harvard report
The United States continued to lead China in critical technologies, namely artificial intelligence (AI), biotechnology, semiconductors, space and quantum, according to a report released on Thursday by Harvard University. Advertisement The authors of the Critical and Emerging Technologies Index, released by the university's Belfer Centre for Science and International Affairs, said the US maintained its competitive edge because of large-scale American public and private investment, a top-notch and diverse research workforce, and a decades-old decentralised innovation ecosystem. To quantify the global tech race, the index assigned considerable weight to private and public funding resources – a US advantage not captured by trackers focusing on research output, such as the Nature Index and the Critical Technology Tracker, created by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, both of which have pointed to China as the leading country in many research fields, according to the team. In January, Nature Index showed that in terms of high-quality scientific research output, Sichuan University, a regional university in southwest China, had overtaken Stanford University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Oxford University and the University of Tokyo in less than two years. The index – maintained by the highly regarded academic journal, Nature – ranks research institutions based on their contributions to articles published in the world's most influential science journals. Advertisement