China Daily

HONG KONG BEGINS TO EMBRACE A ‘SMARTER’ LIFESTYLE

Transporta­tion and healthcare are just two of the sectors that are benefiting from the appliance of science, as Wang Yuke reports.

- Contact the writer at jenny@chinadaily­hk.com

As new technologi­es begin to penetrate most aspects of existence, Hong Kong is riding high on the global list of “smart cities” as it looks for new ways of making life safer, easier and more comfortabl­e.

The Smart City Blueprint was only released in December, but efforts are already underway to assess the most promising aspects for incorporat­ion in the city’s daily life — and there are a lot of new technologi­es to choose from.

In February, Google and the research organizati­on Verily Life Sciences unveiled studies that suggested retinal scans that employ Google algorithms are becoming increasing­ly accurate at diagnosing high blood pressure, strokes and heart attacks, and some physicians are using the scans to confirm their own diagnoses.

One of the acknowledg­ed leaders in the field is Huawei Business Group. Zheng Zhibin, general manager of the company’s Smart City Global Business Department, sees great potential for wearable devices that can spot hypertensi­on and even heart disease, and send early warnings to potential patients.

Wireless medical devices can produce electrocar­diograms, and monitor respiratio­n, blood pressure, pulse and other physical signs.

“They can send the health data to the city’s medical center or to hospitals. If the system spots an abnormalit­y, the patient can be warned before they even notice the problem.”

Wearables could also signal the end of grueling journeys to healthcare centers, because they can send patients’ informatio­n to the medical profession­als via the internet. Moreover, a smart healthcare cloud platform can arrange routine checkups, and Zheng predicted that soon doctors will be able to send prescripti­ons through the platform, which will minimize contact between physicians and patients in the case of minor ailments.

Transporta­tion

The Smart City Blueprint is also set to ease transporta­tion problems in the city.

At one time, travelers using Hong Kong Internatio­nal Airport were required to show their passports or identity cards at least three times before catching a flight. Now, they only need to show their documentat­ion once — at the first point of contact — for a facial scan, which captures a full biometric profile.

The scan is checked against the passenger’s travel documents and a “travel token” is produced which allows the passenger through the remaining stages of boarding.

“Your ID is your face,” said Vivian Cheung, deputy director of aviation developmen­t for the Airport Authority Hong Kong, which has streamline­d procedures to help passengers, including foreign visitors, get on their way as quickly as possible.

The “Smart Departure” system, launched last year, allows travelers to use biometric-enabled e-gates at outbound immigratio­n checkpoint­s. Visitors arriving from 74 countries are issued with a landing slip bearing a “Smart Departure” logo. When they leave, they need only to present their landing slip. Facial recognitio­n technology compares the passenger’s face with the image taken on arrival and the photo on their passport or ID card to confirm their identity.

In another developmen­t, the airport is testing robotic, driverless trucks to transport baggage from terminals to aircraft, according to Eric Yeung Chuen-sing, convener of the Smart City Consortium. He believes the driverless vehicles, which run via artificial intelligen­ce, are more reliable than those driven by humans.

He said there is little likelihood that the robots will make mistakes, because they are programmed to travel along specific routes, while human errors frequently cause delays.

The same technology is also set to be used on Hong Kong’s roads.

Alok Jain, from the independen­t think tank Civic Exchange, said vehicles will “talk” to each other through the city’s fifth-generation communicat­ion system, which features the fastest-ever rate of data transfer, measured in terms of gigabits per second rather than megabits, as happens in 4G systems.

That means 5G is 100 times faster than 4G, and networks that use the technology can process high volumes of data with minimal transmissi­on delays or interrupti­ons. Relying on 5G wireless technology, informatio­n can be exchanged between vehicles, or even buildings, which is seen as essential for coping with the city’s worsening congestion and the correspond­ing risk of more traffic problems.

However, the changeover will happen slowly because the 5G network is still undergoing early-stage testing and standards have yet to be establishe­d.

According to Yeung, only when all the vehicles on the city’s roads have been fitted with the transmissi­on equipment will intervehic­ular communicat­ion become really effective.

The combined use of the 5G wireless network and geofence technology will also help to eliminate congestion. Geofence technology uses GPS and Wi-Fi nodes or Bluetooth beacons to create electronic boundaries that can be placed around buildings or protected areas and issue an alert whenever a person or vehicle enters or exits the bounded area.

That means traffic managers can create electronic alerts that can be transmitte­d to oncoming vehicles in the event of road constructi­on work, congestion, accidents or other hazards.

Tunnel vision

Looking ahead 20 years, Jain said vehicles will travel through undergroun­d tunnels at high speed, and the public transporta­tion system will carry passengers on electric “skates” at speeds of between 200 and 240 kilometers per hour.

The Boring Company, an infrastruc­ture and tunnel constructi­on outfit founded by US entreprene­ur Elon Musk, is developing tunnels and hyperloop trains to make the plan a reality.

In theory, drivers will park their cars on pallets, known as “skates”, and the vehicles will then be carried along the tunnels.

However, the concept has provoked skepticism, especially as the cost of digging the tunnels is potentiall­y enormous, estimated to be about $1 billion per 1.5 km.

According to Musk, his technology could reduce the cost to $250 million per 1.5 km, with the diameter of the tunnel reduced by a factor of two or more, and he believes it would be possible to stack the skates on top of each other to increase capacity.

Wilfred Lau, chairman of the Associatio­n of Consulting Engineers of Hong Kong, agreed that the concept could work: “Tunnel transport is suitable for intercity travel.”

Lau has a vision of a hyperloop tube running from Hong Kong’s Central district to Shenzhen, Guangdong province, with one or two stops in Kowloon and another in the New Territorie­s before the line terminates at Shenzhen.

Zhang Lei, a researcher at the Division of Smart Cities at Hong Kong Polytechni­c University, warned that it would be difficult to burrow deeper undergroun­d to make a sprawling tunnel network: “It’s more challengin­g in Hong Kong, which is mountainou­s and has a high population density.”

Those factors mean the city is vulnerable to subsidence and landslides, while earthquake-prone areas and places where fracking for oil is taking place are susceptibl­e to instabilit­y. Deep tunneling could cause varying levels of damage to surface buildings and potentiall­y create safety hazards, Zhang said.

Privacy concerns

Despite the prospects painted by the smart city experts, one persistent concern remains — privacy. Any device that connects to the internet has flaws that may be exploited by hackers, and the “smart city” concept is based on sharing, collecting and analyzing data. In the worstcase scenario, private informatio­n related to income and bank accounts could be at risk.

Yeung, from the Smart City Consortium, believes a balance must be struck between smart technologi­es and potential dangers. “If we don’t share personal informatio­n on mobile devices with the internet, there’s no big data and the technologi­es become useless. But if we share, there’s a potential risk,” he said.

Businesses are probably most vulnerable to cybersecur­ity threats, according to Jain, from the Civic Exchange think tank.

Last year, the average cost of global cybercrime was $11.7 million per organizati­on, a report by Accenture and the Ponemon Institute noted. In 2016, the figure was $9.5 million, and it has risen by 62 percent in the past five years.

Last year, nearly 70 percent of business respondent­s from Hong Kong experience­d losses as a result of cybercrime, according to The State of Cybersecur­ity in Asia-Pacific, a survey conducted by Palo Alto Networks, a business security company.

However, even though companies can create effective protection systems, risks will always remain. The reality is that even if a business does not wish to be part of the movement, its personal data will have already been recorded digitally and is therefore vulnerable.

“Companies’ future business models and their success will depend on how effectivel­y they implement cybersecur­ity measures,” Jain said.

According to Yeung, while Hong Kong is ahead of many places in Asia in terms of protection of online privacy, more must be done to provide better security.

He is working with the Hong Kong Productivi­ty Council on the implementa­tion of a security standard for the internet of things that will offer guidance to customers choosing IoT devices. Suppliers of IoT products can participat­e in the program if they choose.

“Customers must want to buy products with recognized safety labels, which will enhance credibilit­y and serve as an incentive for producers of IoT devices to improve their security measures,” he said.

Eric Chong, president and CEO of Siemens Hong Kong and Macao, said: “Hong Kong has well-enforced rules to protect data privacy. With regard to the changing landscape, the data privacy laws are stringent and they will be reviewed from time to time to keep up with the city’s developmen­t.”

Practical issues

Zheng, of Huawei, said a number of practical issues will need to be resolved before Hong Kong can become a truly “smart” city. For example, populariza­tion of driverless vehicles would prompt a sea change, such as massive layoffs across the industry.

In addition, Yeung noted that factors such as finance will need to be considered before progress is made, because building a smart city is a costly enterprise — a fact that is especially true for Hong Kong.

“The city was quite well-developed before the smart city concept was introduced, which means we will need to replace the old infrastruc­tures and the aging installati­ons with smart ones,” he said.

They can send the health data to the city’s medical center or to hospitals. If the system spots an abnormalit­y, the patient can be warned before they even notice the problem.”

Zheng Zhibin, general manager of Huawei Business Group’s Smart City Global Business Department, on wearable medical devices

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