China Daily (Hong Kong)

Chinese enterprise­s compete to achieve 8K television supremacy trillion yuan

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

5G-powered 8K ultra-high definition TV is the future of displays and a source of growth from now on — and China’s high-end television manufactur­ers are expected to compete fiercely for market share, industry experts said.

Chinese electronic­s majors and appliance makers such as Skyworth Group, Sichuan Changhong Electric Holding Group, Hisense Group and TCL Technology Group Corp are all beefing up efforts to excel in this new premium TV niche.

Despite continued evolution of 4K into a viable TV format, 8K is on its way into living rooms throughout the world, more so because of the advent of superfast 5G telecom technology, they said.

5G has the advantages of high speed, large capacity and low latency, which presents an opportunit­y to popularize 8K, the format for ultrahigh definition TV.

“Superfast 5G technology can solve content transmissi­on, compressio­n and decoding problems of 8K displays and provide solutions for various fields covering entertainm­ent, medical imaging, broadcasti­ng, security monitoring and remote education,” said Ai Weiqi, research manager of consumer electronic­s at market consultanc­y AVC.

Skyworth is in fact developing the whole industrial chain in 8K TVs, said Wang Zhiguo, chairman and president of Shenzhen SkyworthRG­B Electronic, a subsidiary of Skyworth Group.

The company, he said, is committed to providing a complete range 8K solutions covering video cameras, monitors and cloud operating systems.

This strategy is expected to help Skyworth expand applicatio­ns of the 8K technology to a wide range of fields like aerial photograph­y, education, healthcare and advertisin­g. Skyworth will also create high-definition content fit for 8K devices.

Ai of AVC noted that Chinese TV manufactur­ers have accelerate­d their efforts in 5G, 8K and self-developed chips. This will help brands cultivate core technical strengths and enhance market competitiv­eness. New technologi­es could also help relieve operationa­l pressures.

In September, Skyworth unveiled the Q71, its new 8K TV product with estimated value of China’s ultra-high definition video industry by 2022, according to the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology

built-in 5G connectivi­ty. Priced from 11,999 yuan (around $1,760), the TV sets come in 65-inch and 75-inch screen versions, and support 8K signal reception, decoding, image signal processing and screen display.

“5G offers technologi­cal support for the adoption of 8K, while 8K is one of the best applicatio­n scenarios of the superfast wireless technology,” said Wu Wei, chief engineer at Skyworth.

In April, Changhong Electric launched its new 5G-8K TV products, which are equipped with the world’s first 5G-powered video modules developed by Changhong. They use HiSilicon’s 8K chips, which allow video acquisitio­n, encoding, transmissi­on, decoding, display and other “end-to-end” 8K chip solutions.

In November, Hisense will launch number of units of 8K TV shipments globally, according to IHS Markit

an image processing chip that supports 8K TVs. Over the next two years, the company will launch six AI-powered chips with the usage rate of its self-developed image chips exceeding 90 percent.

But, the domestic 8K TV industry is still considered nascent, experts said. Skyworth will intensify research and developmen­t of 8K chips to improve the clarity, contrast and brightness of images, company executives said.

According to Wu of Skyworth, the emerging 8K TV segment will likely see rapid developmen­t next year in the run-up to the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing and other marquee sporting events.

As for matching content, China’s ultra-high definition video industry is expected to exceed 4 trillion yuan by 2022, according to an action plan issued by the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, the

National Radio and Television Administra­tion and China Media Group.

The plan said breakthrou­ghs will be made in the R&D of products and the industrial­ization of 8K technology by 2022. A cluster of internatio­nally competitiv­e companies will be fostered in the field.

According to market consultanc­y IHS Markit, 8K TV shipments globally will reach around 2 million units, with more than half of them being models with 60-inch or larger screens.

AVC data showed TV sales volume reached 20.89 million units nationwide in the first half, down 9.1 percent year-on-year, while sales revenue was 51.6 billion yuan, down 22 percent year-on-year.

“The competitio­n in China’s TV industry is very intense. The production capacity of both panels and TVs is continuall­y increasing, but demand from consumers who aspire to switch to new TV sets is declining,” said Ai of AVC. Liang Zhenpeng, an independen­t consumer electronic­s analyst, said as the prices of 8K panels fall and related content gets enriched, 8K TVs will rise in popularity.

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