China Daily (Hong Kong)

Siemens pacts power industrial revamp

- By ZHONG NAN in Shanghai zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

Siemens AG, the German engineerin­g and electronic­s giant, plans to build more partnershi­ps with Chinese companies to further develop its intelligen­t manufactur­ing business, which, in turn, would support the country’s industrial upgrade, said a senior executive.

MindSphere, Siemens’ cloud-based open Internet of Things, or IoT, operating system, is designed to help customers evaluate and leverage data to gain new insights and turn data into value.

Siemens has cooperatio­n agreements with China Aerospace Science and Industry Corp, HBIS Group, Baowu Group, Jinyu Biotechnol­ogy, Cathay Industrial Biotech, Yunnan Baiyao and Jomoo, to provide consultati­on services and solutions for digital upgrading, and to help their customers benefit from digital transforma­tion.

It also has a similar agreement with Zhuhai in Guangdong province for a tailormade intelligen­t traffic management solution.

billion

It has deployed its Embedded City Sensor Boxes in the Suzhou Industrial Park in Jiangsu province to help reduce traffic congestion and air pollution, optimize infrastruc­ture operation and improve public safety.

Wang Haibin, general manager of the company’s Digital Factory Division and executive vice- president of Siemens China, said digitaliza­tion today is the most effective way to generate growth, boost competitiv­eness, and raise quality of life.

It will enable companies to make tremendous progress in many fields in the coming decades and has already transforme­d all industries, and will continue to do so. “The digitaliza­tion of manufactur­ing has the potential to push productivi­ty to new heights,” Wang said.

Siemens and the Hong Kong Science Park also reached an agreement to create Hong Kong’s first smart city digital hub in September. Powered by MindSphere, it will tackle the city’s challenges through an open, interactiv­e and holistic approach.

Since 2016, Siemens has been increasing its investment­s in research and developmen­t. It planned to spend around 5 billion euros ($5.93 billion) on R&D this year, up by 300 million euros.

Since fiscal 2014, the group’s R&D investment­s have grown by about 25 percent. A major part of these additional funds was earmarked for automation, digitaliza­tion, decentrali­zed energy systems and the new ventures unit ‘Next47’.

Research intensity, or the ratio of R&D expenditur­e to revenue, was 5.9 percent in 2016.

“We have discovered an urgent need for what is called supply-side reform, which is in essence restructur­ing. We are also very familiar with the 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-20), which is also about next-generation manufactur­ing, and high-end manufactur­ing in industries such as automotive, aerospace, aviation and others,” said Wang.

He Jingtong, a professor of economy at Nankai University in Tianjin, said China’s manufactur­ing industry is experienci­ng a significan­t transition from “Made in China” to “Innovated in China”.

“We are confident of China’s manufactur­ing upgrade, and more and more Chinese enterprise­s are leveraging the growth potential arising from digitaliza­tion,” he said.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? An employee works on the gantry of a Somatom computeriz­ed tomography (CT) scanner on the assembly line at the Siemens Healthinee­rs factory in Forchheim, Germany, in July.
BLOOMBERG An employee works on the gantry of a Somatom computeriz­ed tomography (CT) scanner on the assembly line at the Siemens Healthinee­rs factory in Forchheim, Germany, in July.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China