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Chinese scientists pleads guilty to technology theft
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Nov 12, 2019

A Chinese scientist pleaded guilty on Tuesday to stealing next-generation battery technology from the American petroleum company where he worked, the Department of Justice said.

Hongjin Tan, 35, a Chinese national who was a permanent legal resident of the United States, was arrested in December 2018 and charged with stealing trade secrets.

The Justice Department said Tan pleaded guilty in US District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma to theft of a trade secret, unauthorized transmission of a trade secret, and unauthorized possession of a trade secret.

The market value of the next-generation battery technology Tan was accused of stealing was more than $1 billion, it said.

"Tan's guilty plea continues to fill in the picture of China's theft of American intellectual property," assistant attorney general for national security John Demers said in a statement.

US Attorney Trent Shores said "industrial spies like Hongjin Tan engage in espionage to steal American trade secrets and intellectual property.

"China's economic aggression poses a threat to America's emerging high-technology industries," Shores said.

Tan worked as an associate scientist for the US petroleum company from June 2017 until his arrest, the Justice Department said.

The department did not name the company but a LinkedIn page for Hongjin Tan identifies him as a staff scientist with the disruptive technologies team at Phillips 66.

He previously worked as a research assistant and visiting scientist at the California Institute of Technology, where he earned his doctorate.

The Justice Department said sentencing was set for February 12, 2020 but did not say what sentence Tan was likely to receive.


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OIL AND GAS
Tech juggernaut Saudi Aramco faces new test: shareholders
Dhahran, Saudi Arabia (AFP) Nov 10, 2019
From robots to sniffer drones, Saudi Aramco has ramped up spending on technological innovation while its rivals cut back amid soft oil prices, but the energy giant risks losing its edge after its much-anticipated IPO. Saudi Arabia is offering a sliver of the company, touted as the kingdom's crown jewel, in its upcoming initial public offering that is the bedrock of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's ambitious strategy to overhaul the oil-reliant economy. Its market debut on the Riyadh stock exch ... read more

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