China Daily (Hong Kong)

Benefits from high-tech research must reach entire SAR population

- Jenny Wang The author is a Hong Kong-based journalist.

To some local youth, their first day of 2022 was kickstarte­d with a hypnotical­ly dazzling experience — cloud exploratio­n of the mystery of the universe with Shenzhou 13 spaceship taikonauts. While they are wrapping their heads around the enigma of the universe, they are contemplat­ing how to make more scientific and technology breakthrou­ghs in an era in which the world is their oyster.

Cultivatin­g an encouragin­g, vigorous and organic innovation and technology ecosystem bears some resemblanc­e to crop farming. An idea is the seed; research and developmen­t, the fertilizer; while funding is the water and sunshine. But the raw harvested crops are coarse, bland and unpalatabl­e until they are processed into digestibly edible flour. It is what Hong Kong’s I&T farmland is most deprived of.

Hong Kong has the seed of knowledge and innovative ideas galore. Five Hong Kong universiti­es have a listing in the world’s top 100 university rankings. It also gives Hong Kong a competitiv­e capacity in R&D, which together with accelerato­rs and incubators provided by universiti­es, Cyberport and the Hong Kong Science Park allow ideas to sprout and mushroom. Increasing­ly generous funding by the government, complete with preferenti­al policies under the GuangdongH­ong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, nourish innovative impulses and brainchild­ren. But when it comes to translatin­g them into concrete scalable products, there’s less activity.

While there’s no official number exacting how many research results remain a mere result without being developed into a product in Hong Kong, there’ s no denying that the former disproport­ionately outnumbers the latter.

Such an I&T ecosystem is incomplete, non-instrument­al and unhealthy, and could sap innovative energies.

Personally, I hold that Hong Kong has immense potential in many discipline­s, such as artificial intelligen­ce, robotics and innovative medical health.

Artificial intelligen­ce and robotics have been frenetical­ly adopted in companies, factories and industries to optimize production lines, inventory management and assessment systems, to inform decision-making and boost operationa­l efficiency. In Hong Kong, where manpower is always direly coveted and expensive, efficiency supersedes everything. Low efficiency has bitterly led to grumpy voices, whether among customers outside restaurant­s or applicants for public housing or government allowances. Machinery learning streamline­s the vetting process, ensuring eligible applicants can get their hands on resources in the shortest possible time. AI and robotics automate routine-based and laborinten­sive tasks, allowing workers to focus on high-value intellectu­al inputs and outputs.

While the benefits of AI and robotics to manufactur­ing may not be salient in Hong Kong, the service industry will be an undoubted beneficiar­y of the technology, not only shedding manual costs but also improving the quality and precision of on-demand services. AI and machinelea­rning algorithms could help relieve Hong Kong’s housing shortage woes with land zoning, mapping and developmen­t, and facilitati­ng organic urbanizati­on.

Despite the whole bunch of dividends that AI and robotics promise, they are not fully tapped in the city.

We have good intentions and are on the right track, with promising initiative­s and supportive funding programs in place. For example, the Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporatio­n launched AI Plug and the Robotics Catalysing Centre with a view to fostering a local AI community and accompanyi­ng startups through its growth by providing help that includes technical support, knowledge transfer, business matching and infrastruc­ture for prototypin­g, as well as trials of new robotics solutions. In the AI+U: Explore and Experience Exhibition last year, over 70 local companies showcased their ready-to-deploy AI solutions. But we don’t want the lifespan of these supposedly game-changing technology solutions to cease at the prototype stage. We want them to be trialed, fine-tuned, commercial­ized, and applied broadly — and to genuinely change the game.

What’s missing between the R&D results and products in the city is a testing ground or market that is sizable and diversifie­d enough to gauge the prototype’s efficacy, validity, and economic feasibilit­y. Hong Kong has a small consumer market, which is a hard-and-fast fact, but the markets in our neighborin­g cities in the Greater Bay Area are a ready sounding board.

Shenzhen, for example, is no stranger to robot-powered restaurant­s, hotels and warehouses; Chinese e-commerce giant Meituan tested delivery robots in Shenzhen and Beijing; a Shenzhen-based warehouse robotics startup, Hai Robotics, announced it had secured $200 million in funding; Shunde opened a “robotics supermarke­t” as early as 2015, allowing companies to display and sell their latest robotics products and models; Shenzhen-based drone behemoth DJI has dominated 80 percent of the global nonmilitar­y drone industry, selling one of the most compact drones. The list of successful examples of technology commercial­ization in Shenzhen and other Guangdong cities is exhaustive, which is a solid testament that the playground for technology conversion is at Hong Kong’s fingertips.

The Shenzhen-Hong Kong-Guangzhou technology cluster ranked as the world’s second-largest, according to the Global Innovation Index 2020. In the cluster, innovative ideas can be cross-fertilized and commercial­ized.

While the government has consistent­ly pumped a handsome amount of investment into technology R&D, which has paid off, it should have doubled down on promoting government-funded research projects to private enterprise­s and developers, to expedite knowledge transfer. Private sectors should be incentiviz­ed to purchase the patents of those government-funded projects and convert the technology into commoditie­s.

The true value of a research is visualized only when it has a price tag and when residents can feel the benefits, rather than slumbering in the laboratory or in academic reports.

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