Experts Warn US Is Falling Behind China in Key Technologies

At a gathering of current and former U.S. officials and private-sector executives Friday in Washington, concern was rampant that the United States has fallen behind China in the development of several key technologies, and that it faces an uncertain future in which other countries could challenge its historic dominance in the development of cutting-edge communications and computing technology.

The gathering was convened by the Special Competitive Studies Project, an effort spearheaded by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, the stated purpose of which is “to ensure that America is positioned and organized to win the techno-economic competition between now and 2030, the critical window for shaping the future.”

Among attendees, the prevailing sentiment was that the nation’s ability to actually win that competition was under threat.

Dire predictions

A few days before the summit, the SCSP issued a report predicting what would happen if China became the global technological leader.

“Understanding the stakes requires imagining a world in which an authoritarian state controls the digital infrastructure, enjoys the dominant position in the world’s technology platforms, controls the means of production for critical technologies, and harnesses a new wave of general purpose technologies, like biotech and new energy technologies, to transform its society, economy and military,” the report said.

The report envisions a future where China, not the U.S., captures the trillions of dollars of income generated by the new technological advances and uses its leverage to make the case that autocracy, not democracy, is the superior form of government.

In the report’s grim vision, China promotes the concept of a “sovereign” internet, where individual countries limit the flow of information to their people, and where China develops and possibly controls the key technology supporting critical infrastructure in countries around the world.

Finally, the report warns that under such a scenario, the U.S. military would lose its technological lead over China and other competitors, and China might be in a position to cut off the supply of “microelectronics and other critical technology inputs.”

‘Nothing is inevitable’

In an address to the summit, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan appeared to agree that the nation faces significant challenges in keeping pace with China in the development of new technology.

“We know that nothing is inevitable about maintaining America’s core strength and competitive advantage in the world,” Sullivan said. “And we know that it has to be renewed, revitalized and stewarded, and that is especially true when it comes to U.S. technological leadership.”

In China, he said, “we’re facing a competitor that is determined to overtake U.S. technology leadership and is willing to devote nearly limitless resources to do so.”

Sullivan also said, however, that President Joe Biden’s administration is aware of the threat and has been working to meet it. In particular, Sullivan noted the recent passage of the CHIPS Act, which directs more than $50 billion toward establishing advanced microchip fabrication facilities in the U.S.

“We’re making historically unprecedented investments, putting us back on track to lead the industries of the future,” Sullivan said. “We’re doubling down on our efforts to be a magnet for the world’s top technical talent. We’ve adapted our technology protection tools to new geopolitical realities. And most importantly, we’ve done this in a way that is inclusive, force multiplying and consistent with our values.”

Not ‘fast enough’

H.R. McMaster, a retired Army general who served as national security adviser during the Trump administration, appeared as a panelist at the conference. He said that while progress is being made, the pace needs to be quickened.

“It’s not going fast enough, because we’re so far behind, because there’s too many years of complacency based on flawed assumptions about the nature of the post-Cold War world,” McMaster said.

He called for a more active effort to block China’s technological advancement, saying, “We need export controls now, to prevent China from getting a differential advantage, [while] maintaining our competitive advantages.”

China has repeatedly criticized U.S. efforts to impede its technological advancement, an issue that Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning addressed this week when asked about U.S. export controls.

“What the U.S. is doing is purely ‘sci-tech hegemony,’ ” she said. “It seeks to use its technological prowess as an advantage to hobble and suppress the development of emerging markets and developing countries. While trumpeting a level playing field and a so-called ‘rules-based order,’ the U.S. cares only about ‘America first’ and believes might makes right. The U.S. probably hopes that China and the rest of the developing world will forever stay at the lower end of the industrial chain. This is not constructive.”

5G as a warning

A recurring theme at the event was the development of 5G wireless internet technology, a field in which Western countries, including the U.S., fell far behind China. With the benefit of favorable treatment from Beijing, Chinese firms, specifically Huawei, developed a dominant global position in the provision of 5G networking equipment.

Concerned that having Chinese-made equipment serve as the backbone of sensitive communications technology could create an espionage or security risk, the U.S. and some of its allies mounted a global campaign to block the installation of Huawei’s equipment, even if that meant significant delays in the rollout of 5G wireless service.

“The key message here is we need to make sure that what happened to us in 5G does not happen again,” said Schmidt. “I cannot say that more clearly. You do not want to work on platform technologies that you use every day that are dominated by nondemocratic, nonopen systems.”

Schmidt said that it would be difficult to stay ahead of China technologically, predicting that Beijing would “double down on competing in the areas that we care about,” including artificial intelligence, quantum computing, biotechnology and others.

Maintaining relations

Jon Huntsman, a former U.S. ambassador to China, said that Americans are generally uninformed about how far China is ahead of the United States in some technologies. Now the vice chairperson of Ford Motor Company, Huntsman said that in the development of electric vehicles, for example, China is at least five years ahead of the U.S.

He said that the U.S. must walk a fine line to catch up with China in some areas and to maintain its advantage in others. In particular, he stressed the need to retain person-to-person business and other relationships with the Chinese people.

“Decoupling our people is not a good thing,” he said. “We’ll wind up with China right where we are with Russia if we do that.” He added, “Decoupling is only going to create estrangement, misunderstandings and instability, globally, on the security side.”

Source: Voice Of America

Storm Battering Western Alaska, Brings Widespread Flooding

A powerful storm traveling north through the Bering Strait on Saturday caused widespread flooding in several western Alaska coastal communities, knocking out power and sending residents fleeing for higher ground.

The force of the water moved some homes off their foundations, and one house in Nome was floating down a river until it became caught at a bridge.

The storm is what remains of Typhoon Merbok, a storm that is also influencing weather patterns as far away as California, where strong winds and a rare late-summer rainstorm were expected.

In Alaska, there have been no reports of injuries or deaths from the storm, said Jeremy Zidek, spokesperson for the Alaska Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management. Officials had warned communities that some places could see the worst flooding in 50 years and water could take up to 14 hours to recede.

Gov. Mike Dunleavy on Saturday issued a disaster declaration for the communities affected.

Among the hardest hit was Golovin, where most of the village’s 170 or so residents either took shelter at the school or in three buildings on a hillside. Winds in the area were gusting at more than 95 kph and the water level was 3.35 meters above the normal high tide line and was expected to rise another 61 centimeters Saturday before cresting.

“Most of the lower part of the community is all flooded with structures and buildings inundated,” said Ed Plumb, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Fairbanks.

Clarabelle Lewis, the facility manager for the tribal government, the Chinik Eskimo Community, was among those who sought refuge on the hill overlooking Golovin. She and others were riding out the storm in the tribal office after securing items at their homes from the winds and helping their neighbors do the same.

“The winds were howling; it was noisy,” she said.

Lewis has never experienced a storm like this in the 20 years she’s lived in Golovin.

“We’ve had flooding in the past a few times, but it was never this severe,” she said. “We’ve never had homes moved from their foundations.”

There were also reports of flooding in Hooper Bay, St. Michael’s, Unalakleet and Shaktoolik, where waves broke over the berm in front of the community, Plumb said.

He said the storm will track through the Bering Strait on Saturday and then head into the Chukchi Sea.

“And then it’s going to kind of park and weaken just west of Point Hope,” he said of the community on Alaska’s northwest coast.

He said there would be high water in the northern Bering Sea vicinity through Saturday night before starting to subside through Sunday. Rising water levels farther north, in the Chukchi Sea and Kotzebue Sound areas would persist into Sunday.

In Northern California, wind gusts up to 64 kph were forecast overnight Saturday and into Sunday morning along coastal areas from Sonoma County down to Santa Cruz and at higher elevations in the Sierra Nevada, the National Weather Service said.

Winds of that strength can bring down branches and drought-stressed trees and cause power outages, said weather service meteorologist Ryan Walbrun.

Storms were expected to start Sunday morning and dump up to 7.6 centimeters of rain in coastal areas of Sonoma County and a bit less as rains move southward to the San Francisco area and into the Santa Cruz mountains, Walbrun said.

“It’s a pretty significant rain for this early in the season,” he said, adding that the storms are forecast to last on-and-off through at least Monday and would make commutes to work wet with slick roads.

In the Sierra Nevada foothills northeast of the state capital of Sacramento, fire crews have been fighting what has become the largest wildfire in that state so far this year. While rain was needed, the winds were a concern for crews battling the Mosquito Fire, which was 21% contained as of Saturday morning.

“The winds will definitely cause erratic fire behavior” that could ignite new hot spots, said Cal Fire spokesman Scott McLean, but the rains will bring welcome moisture. “The rain is not going to put out the fire, but it will help.”

Source: Voice Of America

Adrian Ridge nommé vice-président exécutif des opérations et de la fabrication pour le groupe Nikkiso Clean Energy and Industrial Gases

TEMECULA, Californie, 17 sept. 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Le groupe Clean Energy & Industrial Gases (le « Groupe ») de Nikkiso Cryogenic Industries, qui fait partie du groupe de sociétés Nikkiso Co., Ltd (Japon), est heureux d’annoncer qu’Adrian Ridge a été nommé vice-président exécutif des opérations et de la fabrication.

Adrian est un cadre international expérimenté possédant 30 ans d’expérience chez Atlas Copco à divers postes de direction, allant de la gestion des services à la gestion du marketing produits, en passant par la direction générale et en tant que président mondial des divisions des équipements de services et de premier ordre. Il est ingénieur mécanique titulaire d’un MBA en affaires internationales.

Ayant eu une responsabilité mondiale pendant plus de 20 ans en étant basé au Royaume-Uni, en Irlande, au Japon, en Espagne et en Belgique, il permet de mieux appréhender les défis auxquels le groupe sera confronté avec le développement de sa présence internationale. À ce poste, Adrian sera en charge des opérations mondiales, dirigeant les présidents des unités fonctionnelles et les directeurs généraux du groupe afin de développer et de renforcer leur stratégie de fabrication mondiale et leur système de gestion de l’excellence opérationnelle. Il se concentrera également sur l’expérience client, la gestion de la chaîne d’approvisionnement, l’assurance qualité et le soutien des initiatives mondiales du groupe.

« Adrian est passionné par le développement d’opérations qui offrent une “expérience client supérieure” », a déclaré Peter Wagner, PDG de Nikkiso CE&IG. « Il est impatient de se joindre à la mission de CE&IG : “fournir des équipements, des technologies et des services innovants par l’intermédiaire de notre groupe mondial d’entreprises pour aider nos clients à faire la différence !” »

Il sera basé en Belgique et effectuera de nombreux déplacements dans les principaux sites d’exploitation mondiaux du groupe. Avec cette nomination, Nikkiso poursuit son engagement : avoir une présence à la fois locale et mondiale pour ses clients.

À PROPOS DE CRYOGENIC INDUSTRIES
Cryogenic Industries, Inc. (aujourd’hui membre de Nikkiso Co., Ltd.) et ses entreprises membres fabriquent et entretiennent des équipements de traitement du gaz cryogénique (pompes, turbodétendeurs, échangeurs thermiques, etc.), et des usines de traitement pour les gaz industriels, la liquéfaction du gaz naturel (GNL), la liquéfaction de l’hydrogène (LH2) et le cycle organique de Rankine pour la récupération de la chaleur perdue. Fondée il y a plus de 50 ans, Cryogenic Industries est la société-mère d’ACD, de Nikkiso Cryo, de Nikkiso Integrated Cryogenic Solutions, de Cosmodyne et de Cryoquip, et d’un groupe administré en commun comptant une vingtaine d’entités opérationnelles.

Pour tout complément d’information, veuillez consulter les sites www.nikkisoCEIG.com et www.nikkiso.com.

Contact auprès des médias :
Anna Quigley
+1.951.383.3314
aquigley@cryoind.com

Adrian Ridge nomeado Vice-Presidente Executivo de Operações e Manufatura do Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group da Nikkiso

TEMECULA, Califórnia, Sept. 16, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — O Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group (“Grupo”) da Nikkiso Cryogenic Industries, parte do grupo de empresas da Nikkiso Co., Ltd (Japão), tem o prazer de anunciar a nomeação de Adrian Ridge para Vice-Presidente Executivo de Operações e Manufatura.

Adrian é um executivo com 30 anos de experiência internacional na Atlas Copco, onde ocupou vários cargos de liderança, como Gestão de Serviços, Gestão de Marketing de Produtos, Gestão Geral e como Presidente Global das divisões de Serviços e Equipamentos Prime. Ele é Engenheiro Mecânico com MBA em Negócios internacionais.

Por ter assumido responsabilidade mundial durante mais de 20 anos e ter sido baseado no Reino Unido, Irlanda, Japão, Espanha e Bélgica, Adrian conhece a fundo os desafios que o Grupo irá enfrentar com a ampliação da sua presença internacional. Na sua nova função, Adrian irá liderar as operações globais, dirigindo os Presidentes da Unidade Funcional e os Gerentes Gerais do Grupo para desenvolver e aprimorar ainda mais sua estratégia global de manufatura e sistema de gestão de excelência operacional. Ele também irá se concentrar na experiência do cliente, gestão da cadeia de suprimentos, garantia de qualidade e apoio às iniciativas globais do Grupo.

“Adrian se dedica ao desenvolvimento de operações que proporcionam uma ‘experiência superior ao cliente’”, disse Peter Wagner, CEO da Nikkiso CE&IG. “Ele está ansioso para se juntar à missão da CE&IG de ‘fornecer equipamentos, tecnologias e serviços inovadores através do nosso grupo global de empresas para ajudar nossos clientes a fazer a diferença!’”

Ele ficará baseado na Bélgica e irá visitar constantemente as instalações de bombas do Grupo dentro e fora do país. Com esta adição, a Nikkiso dá continuidade ao seu compromisso de ser uma presença global e local para seus clientes.

SOBRE A CRYOGENIC INDUSTRIES
A Cryogenic Industries, Inc. (agora parte da Nikkiso Co., Ltd.) fabrica e presta serviços para equipamentos de processamento de gás criogênico projetados (bombas, turboexpansores, trocadores de calor, etc.) e plantas de processamento de Gases Industriais, Liquefação de Gás Natural (GNL), Liquefação de Hidrogênio (LH2) e Ciclo Rankine Orgânico para Recuperação de Calor de Resíduos. Fundada há mais de 50 anos, a Cryogenic Industries é a empresa controladora da ACD, Nikkiso Cryo, Nikkiso Integrated Cryogenic Solutions, Cosmodyne e Cryoquip, e de um grupo comumente controlado de aproximadamente 20 entidades operacionais.

Para mais informação, visite www.nikkisoCEIG.com e www.nikkiso.com.

CONTATO COM A MÍDIA:
Anna Quigley
+1.951.383.3314
aquigley@cryoind.com

La XCA2600, la plus grande grue tout-terrain du monde développée par XCMG, réussit son premier test de levage

XUZHOU, Chine, 16 septembre 2022 /PRNewswire/ — La XCA2600, la grue tout-terrain la plus lourde au monde conçue par XCMG (SHE:000425), a réussi son premier test de levage de 173 tonnes, avant d’être livrée à un parc éolien chinois le mois prochain.

XCA2600, the World’s Largest All-terrain Crane by XCMG, Passes Its First Lifting Test.

La XCA2600 est équipée de trois technologies principales : flèche flexible haute performance, super-levage et suspension indépendante. En plus de pouvoir soulever 173 tonnes, la XCA2600 atteint une hauteur de levage de 160 mètres, soit 20 % de plus que les machines de la même catégorie, ce qui couvre 90 % des installations éoliennes en Chine.

Par ailleurs, ce modèle est également la première grue au monde à être équipée d’un châssis à 10 essieux, et il peut être interchangé avec la XCC2600, la grue sur chenilles à flèche télescopique la plus lourde au monde. La structure de la XCA2600 est 50 cm plus courte que la moyenne du secteur, tandis que sa garde au sol minimale est 200 mm plus élevée, ce qui permet une meilleure flexibilité opérationnelle.

En ce qui concerne le super-levage et la mise en tension, la flèche nouvellement développée de la XCA2600 est dotée de technologies de contrôle actif et de prédiction des risques de levage pour assurer un fonctionnement rapide et sûr. Son châssis de 3,5 mètres de large, associé à un système de suspension indépendant breveté et à un essieu direct, garantit la stabilité de la machine.

Outre ses fonctionnalités et ses performances de pointe, ce nouveau modèle est plus efficace pour les projets majeurs d’installation d’éoliennes, car il s’adapte aux besoins spécifiques des différents environnements et scénarios de construction.

« Les grosses grues peuvent avoir du mal à trouver un équilibre entre une grande capacité de levage et un déplacement pratique, en particulier celles qui doivent installer des éoliennes à une hauteur de 160 mètres, a déclaré Shan Zenghai, ingénieur en chef de XCMG Crane. Pour y parvenir, il faut faire preuve d’innovation technologique et se consacrer aux clients et à leurs besoins en matière de hauteur, d’accessibilité et de sécurité. »

XCMG a fait des progrès considérables dans le développement de grues tout-terrain à gros tonnage au cours de la dernière décennie, passant de 800 tonnes il y a 10 ans à 2 600 tonnes aujourd’hui. La société a actuellement vendu un total de 126 super grues sur roues pesant plus de 1 200 tonnes, qui ont permis d’installer plus de 15 000 éoliennes.

À propos de XCMG

En activité depuis 79 ans, XCMG est une multinationale spécialisée dans la fabrication de machinerie lourde. Troisième plus grand fabricant de machinerie de construction à l’échelle mondiale, elle exporte ses produits dans plus de 191 pays et régions.

Pour en savoir plus, consultez le site www.xcmg.com.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1900404/XCA2600_World_s_Largest_All_terrain_Crane_XCMG_Passes_Its_First_Lifting.jpg

Huawei Cloud s’engage à bâtir un écosystème mondial de startups et à favoriser l’émergence de 10 000 startups à fort potentiel en trois ans

SHENZHEN, Chine, 16 septembre 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Aujourd’hui, lors du sommet international des fondateurs de startups Huawei Cloud qui s’est tenu à Shenzhen, Huawei Cloud a annoncé son engagement à bâtir un écosystème mondial de startups et à mettre en place trois initiatives clés pour stimuler la croissance des startups : une plateforme cloud innovante, des programmes de développement de startups et des ressources commerciales. En compagnie de plusieurs investisseurs en capital-risque chevronnés, ils ont également présenté le Huawei Cloud Accelerator, un programme visant à soutenir les startups à toutes les étapes de leur cycle de vie.

Mr. Zhang Ping'an announcing Huawei Cloud's global startup ecosystem strategy

Dans son discours prononcé lors du sommet, M. Zhang Ping’an, vice-président senior de Huawei et PDG de Huawei Cloud, a déclaré que Huawei Cloud a foi en la capacité des startups à changer le monde, et que Huawei Cloud est prêt à partager avec elles les 30 années d’expérience de Huawei en matière de technologie et d’innovation, et à bâtir un solide écosystème de startups alimenté par l’infrastructure mondiale de services cloud de Huawei et ses nombreuses solutions de technologie en tant que service, dans le but d’autonomiser les startups et de favoriser leur croissance sur le cloud.

Huawei Cloud met l’accent sur la stimulation de l’innovation par la technologie et l’accélération de la croissance des startups grâce à un écosystème mondial solide. C’est la raison pour laquelle Huawei Cloud a annoncé son intention d’intensifier ses efforts dans la création de cet écosystème par le biais de trois initiatives clés : une plateforme de services cloud innovante, des programmes de développement de startups et des ressources commerciales. Au cours des trois prochaines années, Huawei prévoit d’aider 10 000 startups à fort potentiel dans le monde entier à intensifier leur innovation et leur croissance sur la plateforme cloud Huawei et dans l’écosystème entier.

Au cours du sommet, M. Zhang Ping’an, accompagné de plusieurs experts en capital-risque, a officiellement présenté le programme Huawei Cloud Accelerator. Ce programme porte actuellement sur six domaines clés : les services aux entreprises/SaaS, l’IA, les biotechnologies, les fintech, l’énergie intelligente/la neutralité carbone et la numérisation industrielle, mais il a vocation à se développer pour toucher davantage de secteurs et de domaines. Il propose un programme de formation pour les nouvelles startups et un programme de formation sur le thème de l’industrie pour répondre aux besoins des startups à différentes étapes de leur cycle de vie.

À l’avenir, Huawei Cloud s’engage à travailler avec ses partenaires et ses clients pour construire un écosystème de startups inclusif et dynamique, qui devrait devenir un puissant moteur de transformation numérique.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1899699/image_1.jpg