China, US agree to extend science agreement, China says
China and the United States have agreed to extend the U.S.-China Science and Technology Agreement for five years, China's Ministry of Science and Technology said on Friday, renewing a decades-old commitment to cooperate in scientific research.
The pact had expired on Aug. 27.
The Chinese foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether this agreement would have any stabilising effect on Sino-U.S. ties.
The agreement, signed when Beijing and Washington established diplomatic ties in 1979 and renewed about every five years since, has been hailed as a stabilising force for the two countries' relations, with collaboration in areas from atmospheric and agricultural science to basic research in physics and chemistry.
It laid the foundation for a boom in academic and commercial exchanges.
Those exchanges helped China grow into a technology and military powerhouse, but concerns about Beijing's theft of U.S. scientific and commercial achievements have prompted questions about whether the agreement should continue.
This article was produced by Reuters news agency. It has not been edited by Global South World.