Western University indicates no plans to end research ties with China amid security concerns - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 12:58 PM | Calgary | -8.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
London

Western University indicates no plans to end research ties with China amid security concerns

CBC News has learned Western University is collaborating with China on 16 joint-research projects and has indicated no plans to end them despite growing suspicionsuch projects are being exploited at the behest of Beijing.

Western says it is 'awaiting guidance' from Ottawa before it makes a decision

University College
Western University has numerous ties to China, but a spokesman would not specifywhether the school has any partnerships with Huawei, saying the research agreements with China-based organizations coverareas of health, electronics and the environment. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

CBC News has learned Western University is collaborating with China on 16 joint-research projects and has indicated no plans to end them despite agrowing cloud of suspicion such agreements are beingexploited by Beijing.

The revelation by Westerncomes as a number of Canadian universities severtheir own research agreementswith China in the wake of a decision last year bythe federal government to ban Chinese tech giant Huaweifrom Canada's 5G network, citingsecurity concerns.

The University of Waterloo announced earlier this month it would end its collaboration with theChinese phonemaker, saying the decision was part of a wider effort to "safeguard scientific research" at the school.

Western University has numerous ties to China, but a spokesman would not specifywhether the school has any partnerships with Huawei, saying the research agreements with China-based organizations coverareas of health, electronics and the environment.

Western 'awaiting guidance' from Ottawa on security risks

"Western researchers are currently participating in 16 research projects with Chinese-based organizations,"senior media relations officerStephen Ledgely wrote in an email to CBC News.

.
By even admitting the number of joint-research projects it has with Chines organizations, Western University has been more transparent than most, according toMcCuaig-Johnston. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

"We are awaiting guidance from the federal government with respect to entities that pose national security risks," he said.

Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, the agency in charge of providing such guidance, was not able to immediately respond to a request for comment from CBC News.

Universities in Canada once welcomed research partnerships with China, but the federal government has become increasingly suspicious Beijing is exploiting the openness of Canadian institutionsto acquire sensitive taxpayer-funded research to benefit its military.

In response, the federal government announced in February it would make protecting Canadian research a "top priority" by banning all research with Chinese organizations that have ties to the military. One China expert told CBC News that's easier said than donegiven the level of integration between civilian and military interests in China.

Western University might be bound tosilence, says China expert

"It's very difficult for a Canadian researcher to know whether their research and their Canadian innovation that they develop in partnership with a civilian scientist might be going out the back door to the Chinese military," said Margaret McCuaig-Johnston, a senior fellow at the Institute for Science, Society and Policy at the University of Ottawa and a member of theCanada China forum advisory board.

University College
University College at Western University, seen here in May of 2023. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

The integration of civilian and military development is being led byXi Jinpinghimsef," she said. "This is a big focus for China and it's a risk for Canadians that they might be contributing to the development of technologies that might be used against our fellow democracies, Taiwan, or against certain citizen groups within China."

By even admitting the number of joint-research projects it has with Chines organizations, Western University has been more transparent than most, according toMcCuaig-Johnston.

She said Western likely can't discuss the details of the research because of the nature of the agreement it signed with Chinese researchers.

"Their contract with a Chinese company may have a clause that requires them not to speak about this. So, even if they wanted to, they wouldn't be ableto tell you what they're doing."

The University of Waterloo, University of Toronto and McGill University in Montreal are among a few Canadian schools that have recently announced an end toChinese research partnershipswith Huawei,over security concerns, she said.

For Western University to do the same, administrators will need more proof the research couldfallinto the wrong hands, according to McCuaig-Johnston.

"I think they need to see more evidence," she said. "With Western specifically, it sounds like it's more complicated than simply severing ties."

"They should be having informal discussions with those other universities about why they chose to cut off that source of funding and frankly, I think the federal government and the province need to step up and fill this research gap."

Clarifications

  • An earlier version of this article said the University of Waterloo, University of Toronto and McGill University in Montreal have recently announced an end to Chinese research partnerships, which was attributed to Margaret McCuaig-Johnston. When in fact, the schools have stopped all research partnerships with Huawei.
    May 18, 2023 12:46 PM ET