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China sets two world records in deep-sea energy exploration

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China’s self-developed multi-functional modular seabed trencher completed the laying of over 100 kilometers of the first offshore pipeline project in Bangladesh, setting world records in “sea land directional drilling crossing” and “deep-sea trench behind the channel,” the China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) announced Saturday.

Directional drilling is a technique oil-extraction companies use to access oil in underground reserves. The term deep-sea trench, also known as an oceanic trench, refers to any long, narrow, steep-sided depression in the ocean bottom at depths of approximately 7,300 to more than 11,000 meters.

Usually the depth of the buried offshore pipelines is 1.5 to 3 meters, reaching 5 meters below the seabed, which is already a highly difficult task.

Thanks to China’s domestically developed multi-pulse high-power accelerator, “Shenlong-3,” the depth reached an unprecedented 11 meters for the 146-kilometer offshore pipeline to go through the sea lanes.

Shenlong-3, the world’s first of its kind, is a milestone in developing linear induction accelerators and China’s flash radiography technology. The new project will help Bangladesh unload oil from oil tankers of over 100,000 tonnes.

Xuanji Drilling System: A jewel in the crown

In the past few years, China has seen a boom in homegrown technologies and equipment for offshore oil and gas exploration and a rise in investment in financial and human resources in the sector.

With 12 years of experience in the field, China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) has developed “Xuanji,” a rotary steerable drilling (RSD) and logging-while-drilling (LWD) system for efficient exploration of offshore oil and gas.

According to CNOOC, China’s largest offshore oil and gas producer, the Xuanji system can accurately control the drill bit thousands of meters underground to target oil layer and “remotely drive” the drill to stably traverse more than 1,000 meters horizontally or obliquely in the 0.7-meter thin oil layer.

Xuanji can also do real-time analysis of stratigraphic data, helping reduce the financial cost of oil-gas exploration so as to develop more marine oil and gas resources in an economical and efficient manner, said CNOOC.

Illustration of Xuanji’s underground deep drilling. /CMG

On April 20 this year, the first intelligent production line of the Xuanji system was put into operation in Foshan City, south China’s Guangdong Province, as part of CNOOC’s “intelligent manufacturing chain” of high-end oil and gas exploration equipment.

Li Xi’en, a senior technical expert at CNOOC, told China Media Group (CMG) that the company “has adopted a strategy of ‘commercializing a generation then developing the next generation’ to push forward the domestic research and development of cutting-edge technical equipment.”

“Currently, the Xuanji system has covered 32 function modules for three sizes of boreholes. The system’s success rate has risen from 79.1 percent to 92 percent since the first test, and its key indicators have reached a global leading level. This year, we have built a production line with an annual output of 100 sets of the Xuanji system along with other high-end technical equipment, formally entering the stage of large-scale industrialization,” Li said.

Illustration of Xuanji’s underground deep drilling. /CMG

World’s first Shenhai-1

Starting with only one platform reaching 100 meters under water, China has been making headways on the path to develop its offshore oil and gas exploration sector. The country now has 61 drilling platforms with an operating water depth exceeding 3,000 meters.

In 2012, six deep-water engineering vessels capable of working at depths of 3,000 meters were put into service, marking China’s accelerated development of deep-water oil and gas exploitation equipment.

On June 25, 2021, China’s first self-run 100,000-tonne semi-submersible oil and gas production and storage platform, Shenhai-1, started operation in the waters off south China’s Hainan Province. By February 13, 2022, it had produced over 1 billion cubic meters of natural gas, said its operator CNOOC.

Shenhai-1 is the world’s first equipment of its kind, a China-made automatic 100,000-tonne semi-submersible oil and gas production and storage platform. /CMG

Haiji-1: Asia’s highest deep-water offshore jacket

And the Haiji-1, a homegrown 300-meter deep-water jacket of China, was installed in the South China Sea on April 11, 2022.

Wang Zhen, director of Energy Economics Research Institute under CNOOC, told CMG that “it can be said that China has become a major player in the global field of petroleum engineering technology and equipment manufacturing since we have basically covered the entire industrial chain of the sector.” But he added that China isn’t a great power in the field yet as it is still on the path of achieving that goal.

Asia’s highest deep-water offshore jacket, Haiji-1, in the South China Sea, April 10, 2022. /CMG

According to official statistics, 119 sets of marine engineering equipment were manufactured and delivered by China in 2021, accounting for 55 percent of the world’s total.

In addition, by the end of this March, China’s domestic offshore engineering equipment enterprises had received 273 orders of offshore engineering vessels, covering 54 percent of the global total.

Source: CGTN

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Google trial wraps up as judge weighs landmark U.S. antitrust claims

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Google and the U.S. Justice Department wrapped up closing arguments on Friday over claims that the Alphabet unit has unlawfully dominated web search and related advertising, in a case the government contends could shape the “future of the internet.”

U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta in Washington for hours grilled both sides with questions, probing whether competitive platforms such as ByteDance’s TikTok and Meta’s Facebook and Instagram are competitive substitutes for search advertising dollars.

Mehta said a central issue was platform “substitute-ability” for advertisers, which the court must resolve. He will now begin preparing to render a major decision on whether Google’s conduct broke civil antitrust law. He did not indicate when he would rule, but experts say he could potentially order changes to Google’s business practices.

Mehta also questioned whether Google assesses competitors’ pricing while considering its own adjustments. Google’s advertising business is responsible for about three-quarters of its revenue.

U.S. government lawyer David Dahlquist argued that “advertising revenue is what drives Google’s monopoly power today.”

Google has boasted it feels no real market pressures, Dahlquist said, arguing that the company does not fear increasing its pricing or not improving its products.

“Only a monopolist can make a product worse and still make more money,” Dahlquist argued.

Google’s lawyer John Schmidtlein countered that Google’s share of U.S. digital advertising revenue has steadily decreased. He touted the advertising power of rival platforms ByteDance’s TikTok, Meta’s Facebook and Instagram, and Amazon.

That’s because it’s not made from plastic, but wheat straw and has seeds nestled inside.

Schmidtlein argued that Google is “constrained” by rival platforms “where the eyeballs are,” because advertisers know there are overlapping audiences and can spend their dollars elsewhere.

He also asserted that Google was continually moving to innovate its search advertising products. “If Google is a monopolist, why improve anything? Why not just jack the price up?” he told the court. He later argued that “Google has won with a superior product.”

The Justice Department has hammered away at Google in a trial that started on September 12, contending the search engine giant is a monopolist that illegally abused its power to boost profits.

Witnesses from Verizon, Android maker Samsung Electronics and Google itself testified about the company’s annual payments, $26.3 billion in 2021, to ensure that its search is the default on smartphones and browsers, and to keep its dominant market share.

Mehta also took up the government’s claim that Google intentionally destroyed internal documents that were relevant to the issues in the lawsuit.

The government asked Mehta to presume that Google deleted chats that were unfavorable to the company.

Mehta repeatedly questioned Google’s prior policies, which he said left document retention decisions to its employees.

“They should have been preserved. Should there be some consequence for what at a minimum was far from best practices?” the judge asked.

A lawyer for Google, Colette Connor, defended its data preservation practices, calling them reasonable, and urged the court not to sanction the company.

The case, filed by former U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration, was the first of several aimed at reining in the market power of tech leaders.

Another case, against Facebook parent Meta, was also filed during the Trump administration. U.S. President Joe Biden’s antitrust enforcers have followed with a second case against Google and cases against Amazon.com and Apple Inc.

Source(s): CGTN

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UN adopts first global artificial intelligence resolution to ensure AI is safe

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The United Nations General Assembly unanimously adopted the first global resolution on artificial intelligence on Thursday, encouraging countries to safeguard human rights, protect personal data, and monitor AI for risks.

The nonbinding resolution, proposed by the United States and co-sponsored by China along with over 120 other nations, also advocates for the strengthening of privacy policies.

“Today, all 193 members of the United Nations General Assembly have spoken in one voice, and together, chosen to govern artificial intelligence rather than let it govern us,” U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield said.

The resolution is the latest in a series of initiatives – few of which carry significant enforceability – by governments around the world to shape AI’s development amid fears it could disrupt democratic processes, turbocharge fraud, or lead to dramatic job losses, among other harms.

“The improper or malicious design, development, deployment and use of artificial intelligence systems … pose risks that could … undercut the protection, promotion and enjoyment of human rights and fundamental freedoms,” the measure states.

In November, the U.S., Britain and more than a dozen other countries unveiled the first detailed international agreement on how to keep artificial intelligence safe from rogue actors, pushing for companies to create AI systems that are “secure by design.”

Europe is ahead of the United States, with EU lawmakers adopting a provisional agreement this month to oversee the technology. The Biden administration has been pressing lawmakers for AI regulation, but a polarized U.S. Congress has made little headway. In the meantime, the White House sought to reduce AI risks to consumers, workers, and minorities while also bolstering national security with a new executive order in October.

The resolution aims to close the digital divide between rich developed countries and poorer developing countries to ensure that all are included in discussions on AI. It also aims to ensure that developing countries have the technology and capabilities to take advantage of AI’s benefits, including detecting diseases, predicting floods, helping farmers, and training the next generation of workers.

The resolution recognizes the rapid acceleration of AI development and use and stresses “the urgency of achieving global consensus on safe, secure and trustworthy artificial intelligence systems.”

It also acknowledges that “the governance of artificial intelligence systems is an evolving area” that requires further discussions on possible governance approaches and emphasizes that innovation and regulation are mutually reinforcing – not mutually exclusive.

Source(s): CGTN

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Beijing still tops Nature Index global science city rankings

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Beijing has consistently ranked first in the global science city rankings for eight consecutive years, as measured by the Nature Index, according to Yin Yong, deputy secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Beijing Municipal Committee and mayor of Beijing.

Nature Index tracks the authorship of articles in prestigious research journals and Beijing’s ranking has shown that the city remains the top science city in the world.

On Tuesday, China’s State Council Information Office held a press conference on leveraging Beijing’s strategic role as the national capital, initiating a new chapter in high-quality development. Yin made the remarks while he answered questions from the media at the press conference.

Yin also introduced the capital’s achievement in seeking scientific and technological innovation and attracting high-level talent in science and technology.

Beijing has 92 colleges and universities, and more than 1,000 research institutes and its numbers of national laboratories and large scientific installations are ranked first in the country.

Beijing’s investment in research and development has also been among the largest in the country. Every 10,000 people in Beijing hold an average of over 262 invention patents, ranking first in China.

The capital has a large talent pool with more than 550,000 scientific researchers. In the field of artificial intelligence, for instance, Beijing’s top talent accounts for about 43 percent of the country’s total.

An average of 337 technology-based enterprises are established in Beijing every day, and the number of national high-tech enterprises and unicorn enterprises rank first among all cities in the country.

Source(s): CGTN

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