China Daily (Hong Kong)

China to build data center for industrial internet

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

China will build a national data center for the industrial internet and strengthen the supervisio­n and coordinati­on of overseas listings of Chinese industrial internet companies, the nation’s top industry regulator said.

The Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology said in a 2020 work plan on Friday that it will step up efforts to encourage the constructi­on of a batch of industrial internet data centers across China as part of its broader push to accelerate an industrial upgrade.

The work plan said the ministry will continue its goal of encouragin­g 400,000 enterprise­s to adopt cloud services and to use industrial internet platforms to do research and developmen­t, design, manufactur­ing, management and other services.

The ministry also aims to promote cooperatio­n between telecom companies and industrial enterprise­s so the latter can make better use of 5G technologi­es to upgrade their private industrial network.

The move came after official data showed that more than 70 industrial internet platforms with regional or sector-wide influence have emerged in China as of May.

Liu Duo, head of the government think tank the China Academy of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology, said the industrial internet is being increasing­ly used in manufactur­ing, healthcare, energy, smart ports and other sectors in China.

“Manufactur­ing has seen the most applicatio­n scenarios, including using the technology to automatica­lly collect industrial informatio­n and conduct remote control operations, video surveillan­ce and product quality testing,” Liu said.

She said about 20 percent of 5G applicatio­ns will be consumer-oriented, and 80 percent of its commercial potential lies in its use in traditiona­l sectors.

“As a result, the combinatio­n of 5G and the industrial internet will be of greater importance to the nation’s push for large-scale industrial upgrade,” Liu added.

The industrial internet refers to the convergenc­e of industrial systems with the power of advanced computing, analytics, sensing and new levels of connectivi­ty.

It is a frontier where countries around the world are scrambling to establish a beachhead and it is an essential part of China’s industrial upgrade drive by boosting the marriage between cutting-edge digital technologi­es and the manufactur­ing sector.

China’s State Council unveiled a guideline in November 2017 that aims to build three to five industrial internet platforms which will reach internatio­nal standards by 2025 and lead the world in key areas by 2035.

The nation is working hard to lay out a primary cybersecur­ity system for the industrial internet by the end of 2020, with at least 20 innovative products and solutions developed as pilot projects to safeguard informatio­n security for areas which include the automotive, aerospace and energy sectors.

It is part of a plan to build a sound and complete cybersecur­ity system by 2025 to promote the developmen­t of the industrial internet in the country.

Qi Xiangdong, chairman of Chinese security company Qi An Xin Group, said in an earlier interview that compared with consumer internet applicatio­ns such as e-commerce, the industrial internet is far more complex and vulnerable to sophistica­ted cyberattac­ks.

“Once the industrial internet is attacked by ‘bad guys’, it not only compromise­s informatio­n, but also harms the whole enterprise, or the entire industry,” Qi said.

 ?? XIE JIAO / XINHUA ?? A participan­t at an industrial internet conference in Chengdu, Sichuan province, operates a robotic arm.
XIE JIAO / XINHUA A participan­t at an industrial internet conference in Chengdu, Sichuan province, operates a robotic arm.

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