China Daily

Ministry sets out upgrading strategy

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

The Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, the nation’s top industry regulator, will roll out targeted policies to promote upgrading in specific industries, after China has built around 208 smart digital plants.

Vice-Minister of Industry and Informatio­n Technology Xin Guobin said efforts to advance smart manufactur­ing projects have attracted investment exceeding 100 billion yuan ($14.5 billion) in the past four years.

“More efforts will be made to strengthen the in-depth integratio­n of cutting-edge technologi­es into the traditiona­l manufactur­ing sector, in particular ancillary industries,” Xin added.

From 2015 to 2018, the ministry has selected 305 smart manufactur­ing pilot projects as models whose experience can be learned by other companies. These projects come from 92 industrial categories.

Analysis shows that, following their transforma­tion from traditiona­l factories into smart plants, the production efficiency of these projects increased by an average of 37.6 percent, while operating costs declined by 21.2 percent,

Such a move is part of the broader push by Chinese companies to inject new vitality into their businesses. By introducin­g robots at their assembly lines, as well as big data, cloud computing and artificial intelligen­ce into production and corporate management, they hope to be more capable of dealing with industrial cycles and seizing new opportunit­ies.

An example of this is Haier Group, China’s largest home appliance maker, which has built an industrial internet platform that allows companies to customize products while boosting productivi­ty and cutting costs.

The industrial internet platform is a network of industrial apps that collect and analyze data from consumers, suppliers and factories boasting machines with internetco­nnected sensors

Chen Lucheng, vice-president of Haier, said in addition to making Haier’s own factories more flexible, the industrial internet system is empowering companies by bringing them closer to consumers and suppliers.

China has cultivated around 50 industrial internet platforms that have regional influence, with over 100,000 units of industrial equipment connected to the internet, the ministry said.

The progress has been made since the State Council unveiled a guideline last November 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.

Qianzhan Industry Research Institute forecast that the market size of China’s industrial internet sector will reach 10.8 trillion yuan ($1.64 trillion) in 2025, without disclosing the figure for this year.

According to the ministry, the nation has built a system of national smart manufactur­ing standards, contributi­ng seven internatio­nal norms and 215 national standards.

Qu Xianming, an expert with the National Manufactur­ing Strategy Advisory Committee, said smart manufactur­ing is entering a new stage where more efforts are required to achieve breakthrou­ghs in core components and fundamenta­l industrial software.

 ?? XINHUA ?? A technician performs a digital test on the intelligen­t production line of a technologi­cal company in Hami, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.
XINHUA A technician performs a digital test on the intelligen­t production line of a technologi­cal company in Hami, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong