Beijing Genomics Institute Wang Jian, Yu Jun,
Yang Huanming and Liu Siqi created BGI, originally named Beijing Genomics Institute, in September 1999, in Beijing, China as a non-governmental independent research institute in order to participate in the
Human Genome Project as China's representative. After the project was completed, funding dried up, after which BGI moved to
Hangzhou in exchange for funding from the Hangzhou Municipal Government. In 2002, BGI sequenced the
rice genome, which was a cover story in the journal
Science. In 2003, BGI decoded the
SARS virus genome and created a kit for detection of the virus. In 2003, the
Chinese Academy of Sciences founded the
Beijing Institute of Genomics in cooperation with BGI, with Yang Huanming as its first director. BGI Hangzhou and the
Zhejiang University also founded a new research institute, the James D. Watson Institute of Genome Sciences, Zhejiang University.
Spin-off from the Beijing Genomics Institute In 2007, BGI broke away from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, became a private company, and relocated to Shenzhen. In 2010, BGI bought 128
Illumina HiSeq 2000 gene-sequencing machines, which was backed by US$1.5 billion in "collaborative funds" over the next 10 years from the state lender
China Development Bank. By the end of the year, they reportedly had a budget of $30 million. By 2018, BGI opened offices and laboratories in
Seattle and
San Jose in US, In 2011, BGI reported it employed 4,000 scientists and technicians, and had a $192 million in revenue. Since 2012, it has started to commercialize its services, having investments from
China Life Insurance Company,
CITIC Group's Goldstone Investment,
Jack Ma's
Yunfeng Capital, and SoftBank China Capital. That year they also launched their own scientific journal,
GigaScience, partnering with
BioMed Central to publish data-heavy life science papers. A new partnership was subsequently formed between the
GigaScience Press department of BGI and
Oxford University Press and since 2017
GigaScience has been co-published with the
Oxford University Press. In September 2025 BGI removed the international Editorial, Software and
GigaDB teams, and BGI Chief Scientist Xu Xun appointed himself as publisher and
editor-in-chief. In November 2025 the majority of the
Editorial Board resigned citing concerns the lack of any consultation and concerns about how these changes may affect the journal's long-standing commitment to publishing rigorously reviewed, reproducible research. In 2013, BGI bought
Complete Genomics of
Mountain View, California, a major supplier of DNA sequencing technology, for US$118 million, after gaining approval from the
Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States. Complete Genomics is a US-based subsidiary of
MGI, MGI was a subsidiary of BGI before it was spun out and listed on the
Shanghai Stock Exchange in 2022. In 2015, BGI signed a collaboration with the
Zhongshan Hospital' Center for Clinical Precision Medicine in Shanghai, opened in May 2015 with a budget of ¥100 million. They are reportedly being involved as a sequencing institution in China's US$9.2-billion research project for medical care which will last for 15 years. In May 2017, was announced formation of West Coast Innovation Center, co-located in Seattle and San Jose, on the first location planned to work on precision medicine and feature collaborations with
University of Washington, the
Allen Institute for Brain Science, the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and
Washington State University, while on the second's already existing laboratory with 100 employees to develop the
next-generation sequencing technologies. BGI Genomics, a subsidiary of the group made an
initial public offering in July 2017 at
Shenzhen Stock Exchange. In 2019, it was reported that a BGI subsidiary, Forensic Genomics International, had created a
WeChat-enabled database of genetic profiles of people across the country. In July 2020, it was reported that BGI returned a
Paycheck Protection Program loan following media scrutiny. In 2021, state-owned enterprises of
State Development and Investment Corporation and
China Merchants Group took ownership stakes in BGI Genomics.
GigaScience Press GigaScience Press is the
Hong Kong-based publishing arm of BGI Group, currently publishing the
open access journals
GigaScience (co-published with
Oxford University Press),
GigaByte, and the
GigaDB data publishing platform. Focusing on
open science, its journals have combined data publishing, transparent
open peer review alongside carrying out other experiments in publishing more
reproducible papers. Their journals have won the
Association of American Publishers'
PROSE Award for Innovation in journal publishing in 2018, and the
ALPSP Award for Innovation in Publishing in 2022 for these efforts. In 2025, GigaScience Press won one of the first
Crossref Excellence in Metadata awards based on the quality of their metadata. In March 2023, the
United States Department of Commerce added BGI Research and BGI Tech Solutions (Hongkong) to the Entity List over allegations of surveillance and repression of ethnic minorities. BGI subsequently hired lobbyists at
Steptoe & Johnson to soften language in the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 that would prohibit government funding of BGI and its subsidiaries. As of 2024, BGI is identified in a list by the
United States Department of Defense as a Chinese military company operating in the U.S. In April 2024, the
United States House Select Committee on Strategic Competition between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party asked the Department of Defense for an explanation for why BGI subsidiaries Innomics and STOmics were not included in the same list. == Research ==