China Daily (Hong Kong)

Innovative technology key in COVID-19 battle

- By WANG YUKE in Hong Kong jenny@chinadaily­hk.com

Hong Kong has tapped into innovative technologi­es to supplement its efforts in combating the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighti­ng its resolve to become a regional innovation and technology hub, Alfred Sit Wing-hang, secretary for innovation and technolog y, told the fifth Belt and Road Summit in the special administra­tive region on Monday.

He s a i d 6 3 p r o j e c t s i n v o l v - ing total funding of more than HK$102 million ($13.2 million) have been approved for local universiti­es, research and developmen­t centers, research institutes and technology companies so far to conduct R&D in the detection, diagnosis and surveillan­ce of the coronaviru­s.

This is to reduce infections and contain the spread of the disease, with 57 public organizati­ons taking part in the trial of these projects, Sit said at a panel discussion themed “Fighting the Coronaviru­s with Innovative Tech and Thriving in a Post-Pandemic World — Opportunit­ies in the Greater Bay Area”.

Two successful e xamples, he noted, are the reusable six-layer mask capable of immobilizi­ng bacteria, viruses and other harmful substances, and the wristbands, which, by means of artificial intelligen­ce and big data technologi­es, can monitor whether a person is staying at a designated quarantine place without infringing one’s privacy.

At the discussion­s, held as part of the two-day summit organized by the Hong Kong government and the Hong Kong Trade Developmen­t Council, the heads of local technology enterprise­s shared their contributi­ons and technology solutions inspired by the malaise.

Arthur Chan, director and chief executive officer of Com pathnion Technology, demonstrat­ed the company’ s Stay Home Safe e-wristband, while Rex Sham, cofounder and chief science officer of Insight Robotics, explained the use of aerial survey and 3D technologi­es to help constructi­on companies detect and assess the progress of their projects so as to adhere to social distancing regulation­s.

An air purifier invented by Hong Kong-based NCCO Internatio­nal Company has also been broadly adopted in public spaces across Hong Kong.

Sit said while the pandemic has created a string of “new normals” in people’s lives, the technologi­es introduced will reshape our future.

“The allocation of more than HK$100 billion for innovation and technology developmen­t in the last few years, as well as the implementa­tion of initiative­s, ranging from enhancing the local I&T infrastruc­ture to strengthen­ing support for R&D, have been gaining momentum in the local I&T ecosystem,” he said.

As a strategic region in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, Hong Kong stands a good chance of sustaining the growth momentum by synergizin­g with other cities in the region, said Sit.

In a special address to the summit, Ren Hongbin, vice-chairman of the State-owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission of the State Council, praised Hong Kong for working to develop itself into a regional innovation pivot.

“We support SASAC in working with Hong Kong in developing 5G and AI, and transformi­ng the traditiona­l economies with big data. This will bring Hong Kong a new wave of infrastruc­ture projects with BRI countries and regions in order to provide a new engine for economic developmen­t in these places,” he said.

While ample opportunit­ies are emerging from post-pandemic recovery and reconstruc­tion, markets and potential of collaborat­ion on innovative technologi­es have been flung open by the initiative­s of the Bay Area and the Belt and Road, said Ren.

Benefit from BRI

Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor said in her opening address that under the bigger climate of the Belt and Road, Hong Kong suppliers and exporters stand to benefit from the initiative, which will invite plentiful opportunit­ies for business partnershi­p.

She said suppliers and exporters have been persistent­ly seeking foreign trade partners to branch out and advance their businesses, which will likely be realized under the initiative.

Hong Kong boasts multi lingual, multi-talented financial and related services profession­als, and is widely recognized in financial, trade, logistics, and legal services, said Lam, adding she’s confident the SAR would be an ideal partner in BRI projects.

How will the initiative move forward and where would economic globalizat­ion be heading?

“The Belt and Road Initiative and globalizat­ion will advance in tandem and complement each other, with high quality cooperatio­n making the new type of globalizat­ion more open, inclusive, balanced and beneficial to all countries and regions involved,” said Xie Feng, commission­er of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of China in the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region.

He stressed that both the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Office of the Commission­er are committed to supporting Hong Kong in expanding exchanges and cooperatio­n with the world and serving as a super connector in the BRI.

Since the Office of the Commission­er initiated the “Mainland plus Hong Kong plus Belt and Road partner countries” model as a tripartite cooperatio­n mechanism in 2017, Xie said it has facilitate­d visits by HKSAR officials and industrial representa­tives to countries involved in the BRI, and co-hosted tripartite meetings and matchmakin­g events with the Hong Kong business community, foreign consulates and business chambers in Hong Kong.

In addition, Chinese embassies and consulates in the partner countries have encouraged Hong Kong businesses to join the economic and trade cooperatio­n zones in the BRI, arranged visits of officials of foreign consular courts, chambers of commerce, businesses, and media in Hong Kong to the Bay Area, he said.

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