China Daily (Hong Kong)

Tech giants rally to authoritie­s’ call

IFlytek chief says that leadership’s emphasis on role of AI will put it on fast-growth track

- By MA SI and ZHOU LANXU Contact the writers at masi@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese tech heavyweigh­ts and startups said on Thursday that they will boost investment to promote original research and industrial applicatio­ns of artificial intelligen­ce, in response to the central authoritie­s’ call to build the nation into a leading AI power.

Liu Qingfeng, chairman and CEO of iFlytek, China’s largest voice recognitio­n company, said the top leadership’s emphasis on AI’s role in buoying overall social developmen­t will put it on a superfast-growth track.

“We will pour more resources into exploring ‘no man’s land’ in the scientific territory, and work very hard on incorporat­ing AI into a wide range of sectors,” Liu said. The company has been devoting 25 percent of its annual revenue to R&D for six years.

The comments came after Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, on Wednesday called for more efforts to develop the new generation of AI to inject a fresh driving force into the country’s high-quality economic growth.

China aims to grow the country’s core AI industries to over 150 billion yuan ($22.15 billion) by 2020, 400 billion yuan by 2025, and 1 trillion yuan by 2030.

Tang Xiao’ou, founder of SenseTime and a professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said scientific planning is needed to widen the use of AI. “The technology is not an independen­t industry. It must be tightly associated with traditiona­l sectors to unleash its potential and to boost efficiency.

“More efforts are needed to strengthen the partnershi­p between State-owned and private companies when exploring the applicatio­n of AI,” Tang added. The four-year-old company is partnering with the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology to further advance research on computer vision and it is developing self-driving solutions in partnershi­p with Japanese carmaker Honda.

China is building five national AI open innovation platforms by relying on Alibaba Group Holding Ltd in smart city technologi­es, Baidu Inc in self-driving technologi­es, Tencent Holdings Ltd in AI-enabled medical treatments, and iFlytek in voicerecog­nition technologi­es, as well as SenseTime in facial recognitio­n technologi­es.

The nation is working hard to boost the applicatio­n of AI in the automobile, robotics, healthcare and other sectors. In the first nine months of this year, China’s industrial robot output increased 9.3 percent year-on-year, official data show.

On Thursday, A shares related to AI industries registered strong performanc­es and led the rise of the market. Among sub-indices that went up more than 2 percent were those tracking the companies engaged in facial and speech recognitio­n, cashier-free retailing, intelligen­t transporta­tion, and cloud computing.

The sub-index of the robot industry rose by 2.14 percent, with eight companies in this sector jumping by their daily limits of 10 percent, according to financial informatio­n provider Wind Info.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China