US lawmakers seek China patent data amid science pact talks

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

The decades-old US-China Science and Technology Agreement (STA) expired in August.

The decades-old US-China Science and Technology Agreement expired in August.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:

- Republican lawmakers on June 12 asked the US Commerce Department whether the US government had funded research that resulted in Chinese patents, aiming to highlight what they view as the risks of renewing a bilateral science and technology agreement.

The decades-old US-China Science and Technology Agreement (STA) expired in August, but the US State Department has issued two six-month extensions in order to continue negotiations with Beijing over renewing it.

The landmark pact, signed when Beijing and Washington established diplomatic ties in 1979 and renewed about every five years since, has underpinned cooperation in areas from atmospheric and agricultural science to basic research in physics and chemistry.

But concerns about China’s growing military prowess and alleged theft of US scientific and commercial achievements have prompted questions among some lawmakers, officials and researchers about whether the agreement should continue.

The House of Representatives’ Select Committee on China in 2023 asked Secretary of State Antony Blinken to scrap the deal.

The chair of the committee, Mr John Moolenaar, on June 12 wrote a letter with five other Republicans to Undersecretary of Commerce Kathi Vidal asking her to specify how many patents tied to US government funding had been filed annually since 2010 by inventors in China.

One select committee staff member told Reuters the committee estimated the number of such patents likely numbered in the hundreds, if not thousands, in that time period.

The lawmakers asked Mr Vidal, director of the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), to disclose any affiliation those patent seekers may have had with China’s military or entities facing US export controls, according to a copy of the letter seen by Reuters.

“The American people deserve a full understanding of the extent to which a renewal of a US-PRC (People’s Republic of China) STA is threatening our intellectual property and national security,” the lawmakers wrote.

The Commerce Department did not respond immediately to a request for comment.

China has strongly supported renewing the STA, with its ambassador to Washington, Mr Xie Feng, saying it will “inject more positive energy” into what have been rocky bilateral relations.

US Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns has said the deal needs to be modernised as previous iterations did not account for advances such as artificial intelligence, biotechnology, machine learning and quantum mathematics.

US agencies have warned about Beijing-backed industrial espionage, forced technology transfers and other tactics that could fuel China’s military modernisation, and many analysts say the agreement must be reworked to safeguard US innovation in a time of heightened strategic competition.

Proponents of renewing the deal argue that ending it would stifle academic and commercial cooperation and block US visibility into China’s technical advances. REUTERS

See more on