China’s New Academicians Pledge to Accelerate Strategic Science-With Rare Earths, Quantum, and Industrial Tech at the Forefront

Dec 8, 2025

Highlights

  • China inducted 195 new academicians into CAS and CAE to serve national strategic needs and advance technological self-reliance in AI, quantum, and advanced materials.
  • Quantum physicist Peng Chengzhi and rare earth expert Li Jun pledged to align research with China's urgent priorities, emphasizing rare earth processing dominance and industrial application.
  • The selection signals China's whole-of-nation approach to compete globally in quantum computing, semiconductors, and critical minerals supply chains.

China inducted 195 new academicians into its two most influential scientific bodiesโ€”the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and the Chinese Academy of Engineering (CAE)โ€”with a clear public message: scientific research must directly serve national strategic needs and accelerate Chinaโ€™s technological self-reliance.

At a ceremony in Beijing, CAS President Hou Jianguo told new members that the title is โ€œa mission, not just an honor,โ€ and urged them to help China achieve high-level independence in science and technologyโ€”language that aligns with Beijingโ€™s push to reduce dependence on Western tech and strengthen its domestic innovation ecosystem.

CAE President Li Xiaohong emphasized that this yearโ€™s selection prioritized scientists who support Chinaโ€™s strategic goals, especially the development of what Beijing calls โ€œnew quality productive forcesโ€โ€”the countryโ€™s umbrella term for advanced sectors such as AI, quantum, new energy, advanced materials, and next-generation manufacturing.

One of the more notable voices was Peng Chengzhi, a CAS academician specializing in quantum physics and quantum information. He framed the appointment as โ€œa national trust,โ€ promising to align his research with Chinaโ€™s most urgent strategic needsโ€”an important signal as China races the U.S. and EU for leadership in quantum computing, secure communication, and advanced sensing.

But the strongest geopolitical signal came from Li Jun, a CAS academician and chemistry professor at Tsinghua University. He described rare earth elements as the โ€œvitamins of industryโ€, essential to renewable energy, aerospace, and semiconductor sectors. Li called for turning Chinaโ€™s rare earth resource advantage into โ€œindustrial technological prowess,โ€ urging theoretical scientists to solve real industrial bottlenecks. This mirrors Beijingโ€™s long-running strategy: not just mining rare earths, but dominating the value-added stepsโ€”processing, alloys, magnets, and applications that anchor global supply chains.

Hu Hailan, a leading neuroscientist at Zhejiang University, highlighted the human-centric mission of life sciences, while industry technologist Huang Xianbo (Kingfa) stressed the need to commercialize scientific breakthroughs more quicklyโ€”an area where China aims to close the gap with the U.S. and Europe.

In total, CAS and CAE added 144 new Chinese members and 51 international members, a significant expansion of Chinaโ€™s elite scientific corps. For Western observers, this cohortโ€™s explicit alignment with national strategic priorities reinforces Chinaโ€™s whole-of-nation approach to competing in quantum, semiconductors, advanced materials, and rare earth applications.

Disclaimer

This news item is translated from Chinese state-owned media (China Daily (opens in a new tab)). All information should be independently verified.

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