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China's five-year plan for AI calls for tech advancements and AI in all sectors of the economy

China's five-year plan for AI calls for tech advancements and AI in all sectors of the economy
China's five-year plan for AI calls for tech advancements and AI in all sectors of the economy

China's new five-year plan outlined its ambitions for the country to adopt artificial intelligence across the second largest economy in the world and dominate emerging technologies like quantum computing and humanoid robots.

According to the plan, released Thursday in conjunction with the National People's Congress opening session, the country will "seize commanding heights" of science and technology?development?and "decisive advances in core technologies".

Separately, a report from the country's State Planning Body also claimed that China is outpacing its rivals in AI and other key areas.

It said that China now leads the world for research and development in areas such as AI and biomedicine. New breakthroughs have been made in the independent R&D on?chips.

SWEEPING AI+ Action Plan

The 141-page blueprint for the next five years, which included many socio-economic policies and targets, mentioned AI over 50 times. It also included an "AI+ action program".

China is focusing on technology to deal with its rapidly aging workforce, its looming population crisis, and its fierce competition with the United States for supremacy in core technologies. It also reflects the dramatic progress made by Chinese AI developers, such as DeepSeek.

The plan includes specific measures such as experimenting with robots in sectors that are experiencing a?labour crisis and deploying AI agents who can perform tasks without human guidance.

Beijing's goal is using AI and robots to boost performance and productivity in many different sectors, including manufacturing, logistics, education, and healthcare, said Kyle Chan, a fellow at Brookings Institution, a think tank that focuses on Chinese technology.

In the first paragraphs of Premier Li Qiang's main government report, the government also stressed its commitment to the technology sector - which it refers to as "new quality production forces". This was a much more prominent report than the one from last year.

China's dependence on U.S. technology such as planes and chips has caused frustrations as trade tensions have risen. Both sides have imposed export controls on key resources and products in their tech war - advanced chip technology in Washington's case and rare earths in Beijing's case.

HUMANOID RONTS, 6G AND QUANTUM

The five-year plan and government work report outlined plans to increase investment in areas such as machine-brain interfacing, quantum computing, and 6G.

The plan also vowed to make "key breakthroughs" in nuclear fusion technology, build a space-earth integrated quantum communication network, create scalable quantum computers and show the feasibility of building an?station for lunar research.

The document also highlighted China's aim to become the world leader in frontier R&D, by "accelerating breakthroughs and?foundational technology" and investing in fundamental research. It also emphasized cultivating world-class talent in science and technology.

The Chinese government has also committed to building "hyperscale" computing clusters, supported by cheap and plentiful electricity.

"Open source wasn't mentioned before in previous reports and is also a key difference between the Chinese AI and American AI approaches," Tilly Zhang, a technology and industrial policy expert at Gavekal dragonomics, said.

"I think China has studied it very carefully and decided that open-source AI will be a flagship strategy, and a competitive edge against the United States."

(source: Reuters)