BEIJING, Nov. 18,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- A
report from Science and Technology Daily:
When Dr. Juan Carlos Mateus
Sanchez, a researcher at Brazil's National Institute of Metrology,
Quality and Technology (INMETRO), was selected as a young
international scientist in 2019 to undertake research at a Chinese
institution for 12 months, he immediately said yes.
"It was a great opportunity that I could not pass up," Dr.
Sanchez told Science and Technology Daily (S&T Daily).
Over the past decades, as bilateral relations between
China and Brazil have maintained steady growth, their
sci-tech collaboration has become a model of South-South
cooperation and played an important role in enhancing
people-to-people exchanges and contributing to global sci-tech
innovation.
Learning from China's
experience
The National Institute of Metrology (NIM), China and INMETRO are both national metrology
institutions. They develop and maintain national primary
measurement standards and use them to ensure accuracy and
reliability of measurement results. In 2017, NIM and INMETRO signed
a new memorandum of understanding, identifying electromagnetic
(EMC) as a priority topic, which enabled Dr. Sanchez to collaborate
with his Chinese counterparts.
"China has given the right
place of importance to metrology, realizing the huge impact that it
has on the development of economy, industry and the society," Dr.
Sanchez, the leader of the EMC laboratory of INMETRO, said.
During his stay at NIM in 2019, Sanchez compared the
measurements of electric fields generated in different laboratories
of China and Brazil by designing an E-field sensor probe,
which he calls "the most important achievement".
The young scientist developed the sensor along with a team of
Chinese researchers led by NIM's Dr. Meng Donglin, who was also his
mentor. "At that time, a few people doubted whether we could make
it, considering the technical challenges and limited research
funding," Dr. Meng said.
Eventually, with a fund of 150,000
RMB and advanced equipment from NIM, they spent nearly eight
months developing such a device involving three types of updates
while collaborating with a Chinese manufacturer.
Based on their research, they co-authored a published paper and
also put the device to use in Dr. Sanchez's lab, using it to
establish the standard field strength between 80 MHz to 2 GHz in
his home country, which filled a gap in metrological testing
capabilities. The device provides accurate measurements for other
laboratories in Brazil, improving
product quality and promoting industrial development.
What's more, China and
Brazil have mutually recognized
measurements in this field, facilitating trade in mechanical and
electrical products between them.
From finding common R&D demands, tailoring feasible
cooperation plans, and imparting knowledge and skills to tracking
the cooperation outcomes while involving enterprises, the
sustainable cooperation between NIM and INMETRO provides a
successful example for BRICS members and Global South countries,
said Zhu Xiumei, project coordinator of International Cooperation
Department at NIM.
Close friends with mutual trust
Dr. Sanchez is very thankful for his Chinese colleagues,
especially Dr. Meng. "He is my personal friend and we are very
close," Dr. Sanchez said. "He is patient and gave me all the
support I needed."
When developing the sensor, Dr. Sanchez was new to the different
measurement standard equipment in the laboratory and the
experienced mentor helped him to use them.
Dr. Sanchez demonstrated his outstanding capabilities in
literature search, communication and teamwork, Dr. Meng said.
"Although we have different personalities at work, we are all
genuinely committed to R&D collaboration. It is very crucial to
build mutual trust and foster empathy in international
cooperation."
Upon Dr. Sanchez's arrival in Beijing, his Chinese colleagues went out of
their way to make him and his family adapt to their new life in
Beijing smoothly. They helped him
to rent an apartment, open a bank account, and buy daily
necessities. They also taught Dr. Sanchez how to use mobile payment
and ride-hailing apps.
In the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, when there was a
shortage of masks, one of his colleagues drove to his home to
deliver them. "They called me every day to see if I need something
and to check if I had any symptoms," Dr. Sanchez said.
He calls his experience in China valuable for his life and career. Even
after returning to Brazil, Dr.
Sanchez stayed in close touch with his Chinese friends, exploring
academic issues while sharing personal lives. As an ancient Chinese
poem goes, "If you have a friend afar who knows your heart,
distance cannot keep you two apart."
Broader cooperation in next 50 years
Dr. Sanchez returned to NIM in 2023 and he is promoting further
cooperation between NIM and INMETRO.
Over the past half century, the Brazil-China
friendship has been continuously strengthened and cooperation has
become increasingly diversified, Brazilian President Luiz InĂ¡cio
Lula da Silva said in his
congratulatory letter on the 50th anniversary of the establishment
of diplomatic relations between China and Brazil in August
2023.
Brazil is the first developing
country to cooperate with China in
high-tech areas such as satellites. In 1988, the China-Brazil Earth
Resources Satellite (CBERS) project was given priority and since
then, the two countries have jointly developed six earth-resources
satellites.
Data from these satellites supports the socio-economic
development of China and
Brazil and is widely applied in
agriculture, forestry, water resources, land resources,
environmental protection, and disaster prevention and
mitigation.
Institutions such as the China-Brazil Center for Climate Change
and Energy Technology Innovation, China-Brazil Joint Laboratory of
Agricultural Sciences, and the China-Brazil Joint Laboratory for
Space Weather are serving as important platforms to strengthen
their sci-tech cooperation.
Political mutual trust, economic complementarity, and mutual
learning in development serve as the cornerstone of the thriving
China-Brazil relations, Song Junying, director of
the Department of Latin American and Caribbean Studies at the China
Institute of International Studies, told S&T Daily. Now, both
sides are seeking closer synergy between the Belt and Road
Initiative and Brazil's
reindustrialization strategy.
In the next 50 years of bilateral relations, the two sides will
open up a new path together and build a bright shared future, Lula
said.
This article is written in cooperated with the China Science
and Technology Exchange Center (CSTEC).
https://www.stdaily.com/web/English/2024-11/16/content_258511.html
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SOURCE Science and Technology Daily