The spokesperson added that US actions have also severely violated the consensus reached during a phone call in January between China's leader Xi Jinping and President Donald Trump.
"The hub will support the creation of jobs and provide career opportunities for local graduates and professionals."Archaeologists have put out a plea for volunteers to help sort through thousands of historical items in a city's museum.
Led by Cotswold Archaeology, the Store to Store project involves sorting, reboxing and consolidating archaeological records, artefacts and documentary and photographic evidence held by Gloucester Museum.Supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund, the project aims to ensure the long-term preservation of the items.Hazel O'Neill, from Cotswold Archaeology, who is leading the project, said: "We've been going for about a month and we've found some really lovely things."
Ms O'Neill said items ranged from Victorian lead soldiers through to Roman tiles."It's interesting to see what archaeologists did 40, 50, 60 years ago and what they thought was important," she said.
"It's lovely to look at it again and repackage it so it's available for the people of Gloucester and Gloucestershire," she added.
Volunteers must be over the age of 16 and they will support Cotswold Archaeology staff at the Archaeology Centre in Eastgate Shopping Centre.The former chief technology officer speaks ruefully about his long career trying to bring a revolutionary aerospace engine to fruition at UK firm Reaction Engines.
The origins of Reaction Engines go back to the Hotol project in the 1980s. This was a futuristic space plane that caught the public imagination with the prospect of a British aircraft flying beyond the atmosphere.The secret sauce of Hotol was heat exchanger technology, an attempt to cool the super-heated 1,000C air that enters an engine at hypersonic speeds.
Without cooling this will melt aluminium, and is, Mr Varvill says, "literally too hot to handle".Fast forward three decades to October 2024 and Reaction Engines was bringing the heat exchanger to life at sites in the UK and US.