ISLAMABAD: President Dr Arif Alvi said that there is a need to share the latest scientific breakthroughs, experiences and achievements for the greater benefit of the entire humanity.
“The availability of knowledge should not be contained under the mere tag of ‘copyrights’ as greater accessibility could help humanity to move through the current economic, social and global challenges,” the president expressed these views while speaking as a chief guest at a ceremony to mark the 29th-anniversary celebration of the Commission on Science and Technology for Sustainable Development in the South (COMSATS) at the Aiwan-e-Sadr on Tuesday.
The event was attended by members of the diplomatic corps, former diplomats, members of academia, and the media.
The president said that scientific knowledge should be shared among the nations without any hindrance by resetting the priorities which were focused somewhat elsewhere.
“Open knowledge resources should be utilized and the world should work for the mutual transfer of knowledge. The injustices should be addressed,” he emphasised.
The president further said that transformation in the world could take place in the presence of “ethics or humanity-based order”, adding the new world would be dependent upon these shifts. While the rules-based world order was dominated by material-driven priorities, he opined.
He regretted that contrary to the requirements of the world, the prevalent tendency was towards the ultra-rich who had been becoming richer while the poor of the world were mired in poverty and deprivation.
He stressed that just and equitable distribution of wealth in the world could alleviate the sufferings of humanity.
“The world is not ready to change the exploitative attitude and end exploitation,” he said and referred to a recent report of OXFAM which said that billionaires had doubled their income while about five billion people in the world witnessed shrinkage in their earnings.
President Alvi said that genome sequencing was one of the major breakthroughs in the scientific world which had become more accessible to people due to the exponential pace of scientific developments.
The world is heading towards exponential development as the technology will no longer remain static, he added.
In future, he said, quantum computing could handle the data of billions of humans with regard to their health, besides opening up “tremendous possibilities in the agriculture sector”.
The president cited the agri-advancement of The Netherlands, which though a smaller country, became the second largest exporter of agri-products in the world, adding the country had tapped the water resources by conservation methods and promoting plant science.
He said Pakistan could also become one of the world’s leading nutrition-supplying countries by working on modern scientific lines. Citing costly power production, he said the advancement in solar technology could address the issue.
The president also expressed his satisfaction that the world including Pakistan had raised awareness about carbon emissions which still required wider cooperation among the nations.
The president also lauded the contributions of the COMSATS in the realms of science and technology among its 27 members.
Copyright Business Recorder, 2024