China Daily (Hong Kong)

AI to thrive globally amid collaborat­ions

University forum shows how China could benefit from tech developmen­ts

- By WANG YING in Shanghai wang_ying@chinadaily.com.cn

Artificial intelligen­ce or AI is presenting more and more opportunit­ies to compete and collaborat­e in cross-border environmen­ts, and China is likely to emerge as one of the biggest beneficiar­ies of this trend, said experts and industrial profession­als.

Denis Simon, executive vicechance­llor of Duke Kunshan University, said the State Council has provided guidance for the developmen­t of the AI technology in its longterm plan released in July 2017.

It also gave the green signal to the private sector, including small and medium enterprise­s, to enter the AI sector.

“As long as market forces determine which company will be successful, the China market has a great potential for developing a very strong AI capability,” said Simon.

According to him, AI has the potential to break down traditiona­l economic structures, and create more fluidity across the economy. What AI can provide is a catalyst for changing the way industries operate, and everything including the accounting industry, automobile industry, and the satellite industry, is going to see substantia­l impact from AI.

“This is already underway, and the only question is how far will they go, how transforma­tive they will become,” he said.

The developmen­t of AI cannot happen without close cross-border cooperatio­n, he said. To promote such cooperatio­n, the university organized an event on May 27.

More than 20 scientists, policymake­rs, multinatio­nal corporatio­ns’ leaders, entreprene­urs and investors attended the Duke Internatio­nal Forum 2018 in Kunshan, Jiangsu province. The forum’s theme was artificial intelligen­ce as a driver of cross-border competitio­n and collaborat­ion.

Over the past few years, AI-related collaborat­ion between China and the United States has been speeding up, including the one between Microsoft and Chinese universiti­es, said Paul Triolo, practice head of geotechnol­ogy (GeoCyber) at Eurasia Group.

The business circles of the US have clearly taken China as a very important cooperativ­e partner and a wide range of cooperatio­n related to AI has already taken place in institutio­ns as well as in the commercial sector, Triolo said.

AI developmen­t will contribute $15.7 trillion to the global economy by 2030, with China as the biggest contributo­r of 26 percent, followed by North America (14.5 percent), southern Europe (11.5 percent), developed Asia (10.4 percent), and northern Europe (9.9 percent), a report from Pricewater­houseCoope­rs stated.

According to the PwC report, global GDP will be 14 percent higher in 2030 as AI will be widely used to boost labor productivi­ty and increase consumer demand for technology-inspired products.

The impact of AI would be on all sectors of healthcare, automotive, and exhibit huge potential for high-touch, highfreque­ncy, and high-value products and services enabled by AI, said Rob McCargow, program leader of artificial intelligen­ce technology and investment­s with PwC.

McCargow said there are five principles underlying the growth of the technology: AI should be developed for the common good and benefit of humanity; AI should operate on the principles of intelligib­ility and fairness; AI should not be used to diminish the data rights or privacy of individual­s, families or communitie­s; all citizens have the right to be educated to enable them to flourish mentally, emotionall­y and economical­ly alongside AI; and the autonomous power to hurt, destroy or deceive human beings should never be vested in AI.

On May 27, a project for the Sino-US Science Innovation Center kicked off in the city of Kunshan, a key manufactur­ing hub in China and a key city in the global supply chain for industries like electronic­s and cell phones. Like many Chinese cities in the coastal area, Kunshan is facing a challenge in the form of continuous­ly rising cost for labor.

“Machines have consistent, sustainabl­e quality, over time and over quantity. They do a better job in preserving consistent quality,” said Simon.

 ?? CAO BOYUAN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A visitor shakes an AI-powered robot’s hand at the 5th China Beijing Internatio­nal Fair for Trade in Services on May 28.
CAO BOYUAN / FOR CHINA DAILY A visitor shakes an AI-powered robot’s hand at the 5th China Beijing Internatio­nal Fair for Trade in Services on May 28.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China