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RCMP member in front of canadian flags
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police announced Wang’s arrest on Monday. Photograph: Dave Chan/AFP/Getty Images
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police announced Wang’s arrest on Monday. Photograph: Dave Chan/AFP/Getty Images

Canada charges electric vehicle battery researcher with espionage for China

This article is more than 1 year old

Yuesheng Wang, a worker at Quebec’s power utility, is accused of sending trade secrets to China

Canada’s federal police have charged an electric vehicle battery researcher at Quebec’s power utility with espionage, alleging the worker was covertly sending trade secrets to China.

The arrest of Yuesheng Wang, 35, comes as Canada grapples with a barrage of accusations of Chinese interference, including allegations of meddling in its federal elections, as well as reports of secret “police stations” in the country’s largest city.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police announced the arrest of Wang, a researcher with Hydro-Québec, on Monday following a months-long investigation.

Hydro-Québec, the fourth-largest hydropower producer in the world, is a provincially owned energy provider, overseeing the distribution of power throughout Quebec, as well as export to the north-eastern United States and to neighbouring Ontario.

In a statement, Hydro-Québec said Wang was a researcher who worked on battery materials with the Center of Excellence in Transportation Electrification and Energy Storage, known as Cetees. The utility said its security team had launched its own investigation before quickly flagging authorities.

The RCMP’s integrated national security enforcement team (Inset) began an investigation in August after Hydro-Québec’s corporate security branch filed a complaint about Wang.

“Our detection and intervention mechanisms allowed our investigators to bring this matter to the attention of the RCMP, with whom we have worked closely ever since,” said Dominic Roy, senior director responsible for corporate security.

“No organization is safe from a situation like this one, which is why we must always remain vigilant and transparent, and we must not tolerate violations of the company’s code of ethics.

The former employee did not have access to information related to Hydro-Québec’s “core mission” and his accesses were revoked when suspicions arose, the company added. It said the centre where he worked developed technology for electric vehicles and energy storage systems.

“This is the first time this charge has been laid in Canada,” Inspector David Beaudoin of the RCMP said in relation to the espionage charge under the Security of Information Act.

In recent weeks, Canada has contended with increasingly brazen instances of Chinese interference in the country. Justin Trudeau last week warned that China was “play[ing] aggressive games” with the country’s democratic institutions, following allegations it had meddled in the 2019 federal election. The RCMP has also said it is investigating reports of secret “police stations” in Toronto.

As her government prepared to release its broader strategy to deal with China, Canada’s foreign minister, Mélanie Joly, said the world’s most populous nation had grown “increasingly disruptive” in recent years.

“It seeks to shape the global environment into one that is more permissive for interests and values that increasingly depart from ours,” she said. “And China’s rise as a global actor is reshaping the strategic outlook of every state in the region, including Canada.”

Before joining the province’s power utility in 2016, Wang had brief stints as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Arkansas and as a visiting researcher at Queen Mary University of London. According to LinkedIn, he has a PhD from the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ institute of physics and a master’s degree in materials engineering.

Wang is due to appear in court on Monday and is accused of obtaining trade secrets, unauthorized use of a computer, fraud for obtaining trade secrets and breach of trust by a public officer.

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