1. (Xinhua) China's electronic information manufacturing sector saw steady growth in the first three quarters of 2025, according to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.  

    The value-added industrial output of major companies in the sector rose 10.9 percent year on year over the period, which was 4.7 percentage points higher than the overall industrial sector, indicating a positive general development trend for the industry, the ministry said.  

    Among the major products in the electronic information manufacturing sector, the production of mobile phones saw relatively fast growth, reaching 1.11 billion units, with the smartphone output amounting to 881 million units, reflecting a year-on-year increase of 1 percent.

    In the first three quarters of this year, the microcomputer equipment output totaled 251 million units, and the integrated circuit output rose 8.6 percent year on year to 381.9 billion units.  

    During the period, the combined operating revenue of the sector's major firms rose 8.8 percent year on year to 12.5 trillion yuan (about 1.76 trillion U.S. dollars), and the combined profits of these companies increased 12 percent to 493.8 billion yuan.  

    Major companies in the sector are those with an annual main-business revenue of at least 20 million yuan.

    Source: Xinhua  2025-10-31 20:00:30

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  2. (China Daily) As Dongguan cements its reputation as a global electronics manufacturing hub, MorePCB is rising as a homegrown contender in the printed circuit board (PCB) and PCB assembly (PCBA) sector. With a full suite of services spanning prototyping to turnkey mass production, the company is staking its claim in the competitive global electronics supply chain.  

    MorePCB promotes itself as an EMS (electronics manufacturing services) provider in China, offering PCB fabrication, component sourcing, assembly, testing, and global shipping in an integrated "turnkey" model. By adopting a "no minimum order quantity" policy, MorePCB broadens access from startups and prototyping labs to established firms scaling to mass production.  

    MorePCB's strategy mirrors a broader shift in China's electronics clusters: formerly specialized firms are now adding capabilities to capture more of the value chain. The integration of PCB fabrication and assembly under one roof helps reduce transaction costs, shorten lead times, and improve synergy between board design, component procurement and process engineering.

    As China's electronics clusters continue scaling, firms like MorePCB stand to gain by bridging low-volume/high-mix orders with high-volume stable production. But they will face stiff competition from both domestic rivals and overseas EMS/PCB providers, especially in cost, speed and reliability.  

    MorePCB exemplifies a new generation of integrated electronics manufacturing firms in China — agile, comprehensive and globally oriented.

    Source: By Zhuang Qiange | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2025-10-25 19:12

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  3. (China Daily) Nexperia Semiconductor (China) Ltd said on Sunday that its Dutch company has unilaterally decided to stop supplying wafers to its packaging and testing facility in Dongguan, Guangdong province from Oct 26, a move the Chinese firm called "groundless and malicious".  

    In a letter to customers, Nexperia China claimed the decision was a "direct consequence of the local management's recent failure to comply with agreed contractual payment terms".  

    Nexperia China strongly rejected the allegation, saying it was "completely fabricated and a deliberate attempt to discredit" the Chinese management.  

    "There has been no breach of contract on our side," the company said in its statement.

    On the contrary, Nexperia's Dutch company currently owes the Dongguan facility payments totaling about 1 billion yuan ($140 million), the company added.  

    The Chinese firm said it has built sufficient inventories of finished and in-process products to ensure "stable and continuous supply" for customers through the end of the year and beyond.  

    To safeguard long-term supply chain resilience, Nexperia China has launched contingency plans and is accelerating the qualification of new wafer capacity.  

    "We are fully confident in completing the validation in the short term and seamlessly meeting all customer demands from next year onward," the company said.  

    Nexperia, which was acquired by China's Wingtech Technology in 2019, produces semiconductors used in automotive, mobile and industrial applications.

    Source: By Cheng Yu | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2025-11-02 11:07

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  4. (Xinhua) China has successfully achieved the first-ever thorium to uranium nuclear fuel conversion in a Thorium Molten Salt Reactor (TMSR), and obtained valid experimental data following thorium fuel loading, confirming the technical feasibility of thorium utilization in a molten-salt reactor nuclear energy system, according to the Chinese Academy of Sciences' Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics (SINAP) on Saturday. 

    The experimental TMSR, which was built by SINAP in collaboration with other Chinese institutions, is currently the only operational molten-salt reactor in the world loaded with thorium fuel. The realization of thorium-uranium conversion marks a milestone in TMSR development, providing core technical support and a feasible solution for China's large-scale development and utilization of thorium resources, and for the future progress of advanced nuclear energy systems.  

    Molten-salt reactors are fourth-generation advanced nuclear energy systems that use high-temperature molten salt as a coolant. They boast inherent safety features, cool without water, run at atmospheric pressure, and deliver a high-temperature output. These features mean the reactors are widely recognized as the most suitable type for thorium resource utilization in nuclear energy production.

    This technological route aligns particularly well with China's abundant thorium reserves. It also allows for deep integration with industries such as solar power, wind power, high-temperature molten-salt energy storage, high-temperature hydrogen production, coal chemical engineering and petrochemical engineering, facilitating the construction of a complementary, low-carbon, integrated energy system.  

    According to SINAP, the TMSR program was launched in 2011, achieving major progress from laboratory research to the engineering verification of core materials, equipment and technologies. With domestically developed core equipment and an independent supply chain, China has established complete TMSR technology and industrial chains in basic terms.  

    SINAP said that it will work with leading energy companies to consolidate the TMSR industrial and supply chains, and accelerate technology iteration and engineering application. The ultimate goal is to construct a 100-megawatt demonstration project and realize its demonstration application by 2035. 

    Source: Xinhua  2025-11-01 09:30:45

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  5. (Xinhua) China launched a new remote sensing satellite from the Wenchang Spacecraft Launch Site in the southern island province of Hainan on Monday.  

    The Yaogan-46 satellite was launched at 11:47 a.m. (Beijing Time) aboard a modified Long March-7 carrier rocket. It has entered the preset orbit successfully.  

    It will be primarily used in disaster prevention and relief, land resource surveys, hydrology, meteorology, and other related fields.  

    The launch was the 605th flight mission of the Long March carrier rocket series.

    Source: Xinhua  2025-11-03 12:57:00

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  6. (Xinhua) China's software and information technology (IT) service industry registered double-digit growth in revenue in the first nine months of this year, official data showed on Friday.  

    The combined revenue of the software sector jumped by 13 percent year on year to 11.11 trillion yuan (about 1.57 trillion U.S. dollars) during this period, while total profits rose by 8.7 percent to 1.44 trillion yuan, according to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.  

    In the first nine months, the sector's exports amounted to 45.94 billion U.S. dollars -- up 6.6 percent year on year.  

    Total revenue of the information technology service sector increased by 14.3 percent year on year to around 7.64 trillion yuan, contributing 68.8 percent of the total revenue of this industry.  

    Specifically, the revenue of cloud computing and big data services surged 13.7 percent year on year to 1.16 trillion yuan in the same period.

    Source: Xinhua  2025-10-31 17:46:45

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  7. (China Daily) China's pharmaceutical sector, once driven largely by generic drug production, is now witnessing a steady rise in innovative drug development, cross-border partnerships, and record research and development spending, signaling a structural transformation toward high-quality growth, experts and industry insiders said.  

    In the first half, Jiangsu Hengrui Pharmaceuticals Co Ltd reported total revenue of 15.76 billion yuan ($2.21 billion), up nearly 16 percent year-on-year, with net profit rising around 30 percent to 4.45 billion yuan, according to its interim report.  

    For the first time, income from innovative drugs and licensing accounted for more than 60 percent of its total revenue. In 2018, the majority of the company's revenue was generated from generics, while only a small fraction came from innovative products.  

    The shift reflects more than just product mix. "Innovation and globalization have become the twin engines driving our growth," the company said in a statement to China Daily. "As one of the country's leading R&D-driven pharmaceutical enterprises, we have made continuous innovation our first development strategy."

    Over the years, Hengrui has invested more than 48 billion yuan in research and development, with its R&D-to-revenue ratio climbing to 29.4 percent in 2024 — among the highest in the industry. The company operates 14 research centers worldwide, supported by a 5,600-strong global research team.  

    To date, Hengrui has secured domestic approvals for 24 Category 1 innovative drugs and four Category 2 new drugs.  

    Hengrui's transformation reflects not just the company's evolution, but the transformation of China's broader pharmaceutical industry.

    Across China, a growing number of once traditional drugmakers, such as Jiangsu Hansoh Pharmaceutical Group Co Ltd, Jiangsu province-based Simcere Pharmaceutical Group Ltd and Hebei province-based CSPC Pharmaceutical Group Ltd, now are achieving similar transitions, reporting double-digit R&D growth and rising revenue shares from innovative products, according to their interim reports.  

    The shift is reconfirmed by hard figures.  

    China's pharmaceutical industry, now the world's second largest, accounts for around 30 percent of the global pipeline of innovative drugs in research, according to the National Medical Products Administration.  

    Jin Chunlin, director of the Shanghai institute of medical science and technology information, said China's pharmaceutical industry is entering a new developmental phase, underpinned by policy reform and accumulated industry expertise.

    Jin explained that the generic-drug era was an essential foundation. It allowed firms to accumulate funds, master manufacturing techniques and establish a robust drug quality evaluation system. However, he said: "Companies cannot remain forever in the comfort zone of generics. Innovation is the only way forward."  

    The industry's transformation has been propelled by a decade of deep structural reforms. Beginning in 2015, the government overhauled drug review and approval mechanisms, accelerating the path to market for innovative therapies.  

    A landmark shift came in 2018 with the introduction of the national drug centralized procurement program, designed to pool public hospital demand and negotiate lower prices directly with drugmakers. By reducing inflated generic prices, the reform freed up funds for medical insurance coverage and redirected corporate focus toward innovation.

    By 2020, a consensus had formed across the industry: the era of high-margin generics was over. China's pharmaceutical sector needed to evolve from imitation to innovation.  

    "The national drug centralized procurement reform has effectively reshaped China's pharmaceutical landscape," said Jiang Bin, deputy director of the Research Center of Public Policy at Peking University. "It has driven the industry away from a 'high-marketing, high-margin' model toward one defined by 'low cost and high innovation', improving efficiency and encouraging higher-quality growth."

    Jiang added that the reform's impact "extends far beyond price reductions", helping establish a more transparent, competitive and sustainable market order.  

    The program continues to evolve. Its 11th round, currently underway, has shifted from "price suppression "to "value optimization", with new emphasis on both affordability and quality.  

    Complementing these efforts, the authorities have rolled out multiple measures to support the high-quality development of innovative drugs, providing full-chain support for R&D, clinical trials, approval, production and commercialization.

    In 2025, for the first time, commercial health insurance was formally included in national drug reimbursement negotiations, paving the way for chimeric antigen receptor T-cell and gene therapies to enter the domestic payment system.  

    China's regulatory efficiency for new drugs has also improved dramatically. Over the past decade, the average review cycle for new medicines has been shortened from several years to just months, enabling companies to bring novel therapies to patients faster.  

    Since September, the National Medical Products Administration has implemented a 30-working-day fast-track review for key innovative drugs with clear clinical value. Eligible products include pediatric, oncology, and rare-disease treatments, specifically those supported by national R&D programs, or global multi center trials led or co-led by Chinese principal investigators.

    According to the administration, more than 200 innovative drugs and 260 medical devices have been approved in the past five years. In the first half of 2025 alone, 43 new innovative drugs were approved including 40 developed domestically, with an average review time of 11 months, a 62 percent reduction compared with 2018.  

    Zhao Heng, founder of consultancy Latitude Health, which specializes on the healthcare industry, said the acceleration allows Chinese patients to access global breakthroughs faster while helping domestic innovators reach commercialization sooner.  

    The shift is also evident in global markets.  

    Data from PharmCube, an industry intelligence firm showed that in 2024, Chinese pharmaceutical companies completed 94 out-licensing transactions with a total contract value of $51.9 billion, up 26 percent year-on-year. Upfront payments reached $4.1 billion, marking a 16 percent increase from 2023.

    The momentum has only accelerated in 2025. In the first half alone, the total value of innovative drug out-licensing deals reached nearly $66 billion, already surpassing the full-year total for 2024, said Xu Jinghe, deputy commissioner of the National Medical Products Administration.  

    These collaborations show that Chinese innovation is gaining recognition from the global pharmaceutical community. Among the most prominent examples is that of Hengrui's $12.5 billion license-out collaboration with London-based GlaxoSmithKline, including a $500 million upfront payment and potential milestones worth $12 billion, one of the largest licensing deals ever signed by a Chinese drugmaker.  

    "Business development revenue has become a significant contributor to our performance," the company said. "Through out-licensing and co-development, we share R&D risks, learn from international partners, and bring Chinese innovation to global patients."

    Across the industry, R&D intensity is climbing steadily. Major firms such as Simcere and Hansoh are deepening investment to sustain innovation. Simcere's R&D spending reached 28.7 percent of revenue in the first half, while Hansoh raised its R&D budget by 20.4 percent to 1.44 billion yuan.  

    These surges in spending have been underpinned by capital market reforms — notably the STAR Market in Shanghai and Hong Kong stock exchange's Chapter 18A list, which allows pre-revenue biotech firms to raise innovation funding.  

    Despite strong momentum, challenges persist. Developing a single innovative drug can take more than 10 years and cost upwards of $1 billion. Many smaller firms face financial strain as they await trial results, and competition in crowded fields such as oncology and diabetes has intensified.

    Industry executives note that the hardest part of transformation lies in overcoming inertia, shifting from the predictable "recipe" of generics to the uncertainty of true innovation, which demands tolerance for failure and a culture that rewards experimentation.  

    Zhou Liyun, chairman of PharmCube, said fostering trial and error and enabling market-based selection help retain the global biopharmaceutical industry dynamics and China is now beginning to cultivate a similar innovation ecosystem.  

    For Hengrui, the next step lies in differentiation. "To stand out globally, innovation must address unmet clinical needs," the company said. 

    "From target selection to indication expansion, we're pursuing diversified, patient-centered strategies across oncology, metabolic and cardiovascular diseases, immunological and respiratory diseases, and neuroscience."  From 2025 to 2027, the company expects dozens of major innovations to reach the market, including GLP-1 therapies for obesity and diabetes, and next-generation oncology drugs.

    Source: By Li Jing | China Daily | Updated: 2025-10-21 10:05

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  8. (China Daily) Chinese smart home appliance maker Dreame Technology is stepping up efforts to expand its global presence, pouring significant investment into research and development and driving technological innovation based on user demand.  

    Yu Hao, founder and CEO of Dreame Technology, highlighted the importance of strengthening investment in supply chain infrastructure, developing independent production capabilities across the entire industrial chain and establishing a global retail network.  

    He said the company's revenue has grown at a compound annual rate surpassing 100 percent over the past few years, and it plans to further expand its presence in overseas markets and attract top talent from around the world.

    The company is intensifying its localization strategy by introducing customized products designed to suit the usage habits and application scenarios of consumers in various countries.  

    Meanwhile, it has expanded both its online and offline sales channels, such as emerging e-commerce platforms, and adopted differentiated marketing strategies, Yu added.  

    The company's products are now available in more than 100 countries and regions, including Europe, North America, Southeast Asia, East Asia, the Middle East, Africa and South America, with international sales contributing 65 percent of total revenue in 2024.  

    Its global sales of robotic vacuum cleaners and floor-cleaning machines increased by 178 percent and 100 percent year-on-year, respectively, from January to May, ranking first in 18 countries and regions around the world.

    In the first half of 2024, its gross merchandise value in Southeast Asia jumped by more than 150 percent year-on-year, while sales in Japan, South Korea and Australia soared 292 percent year-on-year during the same period.  

    Moreover, as of end-June, Dreame had filed 6,379 patent applications worldwide, with 3,155 patents granted. Invention patents accounted for 45 percent of the total.  

    "China's cleaning appliances sector is projected to experience rapid growth driven by technological advancements, continuous product innovation, and the gradual unlocking of immense consumer demand in smaller cities," said Zhao Meimei, assistant president of Beijing-based market consultancy All View Cloud, which specializes in home appliances.  

    It is vital for Chinese household appliance makers to seek overseas expansion for new profit growth points and long-term development as the domestic market approaches saturation, Zhao said.

    Developing a robust global industrial chain and strengthening operational capabilities abroad will enable Chinese companies to better leverage international resources and enhance management efficiency, she added.  

    Zhao also emphasized China's growing influence in global manufacturing, noting that the country is now the world's largest manufacturing hub with a fully developed industrial chain.  

    "Globalization presents both opportunities and challenges for Chinese home appliance manufacturers," she said, highlighting that it will ultimately drive the sector toward high-quality transformation and upgrading.

    A report from All View Cloud revealed that the penetration rates of robotic vacuum cleaners and floor-cleaning machines in China have reached 5.5 percent and 3.1 percent, respectively.  

    Boosted by China's consumer goods trade-in program, online sales of robotic vacuum cleaners surged 45.5 percent year-on-year in the first half, reflecting consumers' growing interest in robotic vacuum cleaners and sweeping robots, the consultancy said.  

    According to the report, Chinese-made robotic vacuum cleaners are becoming increasingly popular among overseas buyers, particularly in Germany, the United States, Japan and Australia.  

    According to market consultancy IDC, global shipments of smart home cleaning robots are expected to reach 32.1 million units in 2025, representing a 28.2 percent year-on-year increase. The compound annual growth rate is projected to hit 26 percent by 2028.

    Chen Hui, general manager of AVC Revo, said since the start of trade tensions between China and the United States, Chinese home appliance manufacturers have been expanding their overseas production capacity and optimizing their global presence to offset the impact of tariff barriers and lower operational costs.  

    He added that setting up global R&D centers will enable Chinese companies to strengthen their innovation capabilities, master cutting-edge technologies and gain greater influence amid intensifying international competition.  

    Liang Zhenpeng, an independent consumer electronics analyst, said overseas consumers are increasingly seeking diverse, personalized and customized Chinese-made home appliances, showing strong interest in intelligent and high quality products.  

    He emphasized that Chinese home appliance companies should prioritize R&D, invest more in technological innovation and enhance product features to meet the diversified demands of international buyers.

    Source: By Fan Feifei | China Daily | Updated: 2025-10-23 09:53

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  9. (Xinhua) China's Ministry of Commerce said on Saturday that the Dutch government's improper interference in internal corporate affairs has led to the ongoing chaos in global industrial and supply chains.  

    A spokesperson for the ministry made the remarks when asked to comment on recent issues related to semiconductor manufacturer Nexperia, an overseas subsidiary of Chinese company Wingtech.  

    As a responsible major country, China fully considers the security and stability of domestic and global industrial and supply chains, the spokesperson said.  

    China welcomes enterprises facing practical difficulties to promptly contact the ministry or local commerce authorities, the spokesperson added, noting that the ministry will take into account the actual circumstances and grant export exemptions to eligible enterprises.

    Source: Xinhua  2025-11-01 11:04:00

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  10. (Xinhua) China's 42nd Antarctic expedition team set sail from Shanghai on Saturday.  

    "During this expedition, China plans, for the first time, to conduct scientific drilling experiments in lakes deep in the Antarctic inland ice sheet," said Wei Fuhai, leader and chief scientist of China's 42nd Antarctic expedition team.   

    "Using domestically built hot-water and thermal-melting drill systems, we will carry out clean drilling and sampling through ice more than 3,000 meters thick."  

    Antarctic subglacial lakes are characterized by extreme conditions, including high pressure, low temperature, darkness, and oligotrophy, hosting a unique ecosystem and preserving rich archives of ice-sheet history and climate change. Investigating these lakes is therefore essential for understanding sedimentary processes and the evolution of life.  

    To further advance understanding of Antarctica's role in global climate change, this expedition team will collect long-term observational records in key regions such as the Amundsen Sea and Ross Sea.

    "Continuously enhancing our ability to understand, protect, and utilize Antarctica is not only an inevitable requirement for China to build itself into a strong maritime nation, but also a way to make new contributions to promoting the building of a community with a shared future for humanity," said Long Wei, deputy director of the Chinese Arctic and Antarctic Administration.

    Enhancing Qinling Station

    China's Qinling Station in Antarctica began operation on Feb 7, 2024.  

    "During the expedition, we will continue to improve the scientific research building, communications network and other supporting facilities at Qinling Station, further boosting both the operational safeguard and scientific support capabilities," said Wang Tao, assistant expedition leader and head of the Qinling Station.  

    They will also continue to verify the reliability and adaptability of the domestically built desalination, wind power and photovoltaic systems already in place.

    During the construction of Qinling Station, China deployed, for the first time, a wind-solar-hydrogen-storage hybrid renewable energy system, cutting fossil fuel consumption by over 100 tons annually. Even on the polar nights without wind or sunlight, the station can still operate on stored green power for about 2.5 hours, keeping scientific instruments and essential life-support equipment running on total clean energy for short periods.  

    The construction team will install and optimize the Qinling Station's smart logistics warehouse and an intelligent safety control system. The warehouse pairs polar robots with an AI-driven platform to enable unmanned management throughout the entire process, boosting material handling efficiency by 40 percent.

    Testing new equipment

    During the expedition, a suite of new technologies will be deployed and tested in the icy wilderness of the Antarctic. Core hardware for validation includes China's independently developed and manufactured Snow Leopard 6×6 wheeled vehicle and the THT550 high-power fully hydraulic towing equipment.  

    Additionally, multiple advanced systems such as automated observation and satellite remote sensing, along with ecological submersible buoys and a coordinated net system for krill research, will be put into practical application.  

    The expedition brings together a diverse team of over 500 members from more than 80 institutions on the Chinese mainland, alongside researchers from over 10 countries and regions, including Thailand, Chile, Portugal, and Hong Kong and Macao special administrative regions, fostering broader international scientific collaboration.  

    "The mission is supported by both the Xuelong and Xuelong 2 polar research icebreakers," said Long, adding that the team is scheduled to conclude the mission by May 2026 and return to China.

    Source: Xinhua  2025-11-01 14:25:00

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