China Daily (Hong Kong)

‘Innovation magic’ helped beat virus

- By ZHANG YANGFEI zhangyangf­ei@chinadaily.com.cn

China has been flexible and speedy in using technology and innovation to respond to the novel coronaviru­s crisis, said Denis Depoux.

Chinese technologi­es in areas such as connectivi­ty and developmen­t of mobile applicatio­ns played a big role in powering the fight against COVID-19, he said at the Vision China event on Sunday.

The aftermath of the pandemic, which has included travel restrictio­ns, economic and social uncertaint­y and business disruption, has also stimulated digitizati­on and ideas to minimize physical contact. More new ideas will be needed to resume “normal order”, he said.

Depoux said China had used its “innovation magic” to cope with the outbreak.

As the cradle of design thinking and inventing practical solutions to problems, China accelerate­d innovation during the crisis. Depoux said this was nothing new as similar efforts were made in 2003 in the fight against the severe acute respirator­y syndrome outbreak. For example, at the time Taobao, the country’s biggest e-commerce platform, started to grow rapidly.

Depoux said Chinese innovation is about “connection, flexibilit­y, concrete tooling, speed, churn and growth” and its success was driven by several key players.

To spur innovation, Chinese government­s at all levels have provided funds and incentives, made data available and eased administra­tive procedures for production of healthcare equipment, protective gear and new drugs.

Internet giants also accepted their responsibi­lities and created applicatio­ns, such as the Suishenban health code app, to facilitate services for residents. “The internet giants had the ability to provide not only their traditiona­l services, but to ‘connect the dots’ … to use their supply chains and ability to connect companies and individual­s to fight the crisis,” he said.

Business such as telecommun­ications company Huawei and Mavic drones repurposed their delivery and service robots to put them into use in hospitals or contactles­s elevator systems. Small and medium-sized enterprise­s, as well as startups, were also innovative in the provision of services such as registrati­on, travel history monitoring, healthcare system administra­tion and insurance.

Depoux said all the innovative measures, whether powered by low or cutting-edge technologi­es, proved to be useful, smart, agile and efficient. Telecommun­ication companies, for example, used simple technology to make tracking travel history possible by simply scanning a QR code. Sensetime, a leading artificial intelligen­ce company, developed a solution to check people’s temperatur­e and make sure they wear masks properly. Depoux called it a “very interestin­g face-recognitio­n developmen­t”, considerin­g people were wearing masks.

 ??  ?? Denis Depoux
Denis Depoux is the global managing director of Roland Berger, an internatio­nal consulting firm headquarte­red in Munich, Germany. He joined Roland Berger in 2001, focusing on the energy and environmen­tal sectors. Depoux has been actively supporting the company’s China operations since 2007 and became the company’s managing director this year.
Denis Depoux Denis Depoux is the global managing director of Roland Berger, an internatio­nal consulting firm headquarte­red in Munich, Germany. He joined Roland Berger in 2001, focusing on the energy and environmen­tal sectors. Depoux has been actively supporting the company’s China operations since 2007 and became the company’s managing director this year.

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