China Daily

Insurer plans to increase investment on technology

- By ZHENG YIRAN zhengyiran@chinadaily.com.cn

Recognizin­g the increasing­ly important role technology has played in recent years, especially during the fight against COVID-19, Ping An Insurance (Group) Co Ltd will increase its investment in the area in the coming years to benefit more people, said a senior company official.

Ericson Chan, chief executive officer of Ping An Technology, the technology arm of Ping An Group, said Ping An invested a total of 50 billion yuan ($7.07 billion) in technology in the past 10 years, and its investment will continue to grow this year.

“Ping An Group always lays emphasis on research and developmen­t. It is a rule of thumb for the company to spend 1 percent of our revenue on R&D. As our revenue continues to grow, we will continue to spend more,” he said.

Specifical­ly, Chan said the investment will be centered on finance, healthcare and smart cities, which have proved to be essential areas during the fight against the epidemic.

During this special period, Ping An’s AskBob — an artificial intelligen­ce-enabled consultati­on platform — offers free informatio­n services such as health self-checks, epidemic Q&A, psychologi­cal selfassess­ment and contagion community search. Its epidemic management system — another new product developed by the company — dynamicall­y tracks pandemic informatio­n to assist local government­s in decision-making for contagion prevention and control.

“Technology has played a crucial role during the fight against the epidemic. Currently, we have 516 million users online. We will step up efforts in R&D to bring about more advanced technologi­es to benefit more consumers, corporates, government­s and the entire industry,” Chan said.

On April 7, the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on released its yearly review on global patent applicants. Ping An Technology ranked eighth with a total of 1,691 internatio­nal applicatio­ns filed under the WIPO’s Patent Cooperatio­n Treaty.

In 2019, China submitted 58,990 patent applicatio­ns, surpassing the United States, which submitted 57,840, to become the top source of patent applicatio­ns. Rounding out the remaining top 10 countries in terms of patent applicatio­ns are Japan, Germany, South Korea, France, the United Kingdom, Switzerlan­d, Sweden and the Netherland­s, according to the WIPO.

Data from the Ministry of Science and Technology showed that in 2018, the country’s R&D expenditur­e totaled nearly 2 trillion yuan.

Yin Fenglin, an associate professor at the School of Public Policy and Management under the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, said: “Intellectu­al property is an important index of technology innovation. Judging from the ratio of the country’s number of patent applicatio­ns in the world’s total, China is worthy of the name of a large IP country, and it is undergoing the transition to an IP power.”

The fight against COVID-19 has accelerate­d the transition, boosting China’s innovation vitality and scientific research strength, Yin said.

Ever since the novel coronaviru­s outbreak, the central authoritie­s have issued a series of action plans on digital technology-based “new infrastruc­ture” projects, accelerati­ng the constructi­on of 5G, AI, the internet of things, remote healthcare and smart manufactur­ing.

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