China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Upgrade role for foreign companies

- By MASI andZHONGNA­N Contact the writers at masi@chinadaily.com.cn and zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

Official says more R&D centers will help country modernize its manufactur­ing

Foreign companies could get more involved into the Made in China 2025 strategy by setting up research and developmen­t centers, talent training organizati­ons and smart plants in the country, a senior official at theMinistr­y of Industry and Informatio­n Technology said.

Li Dong, director of the industrial equipment department at the MIIT, said in an exclusive interview with China Daily: “We welcome foreign companies to expand investment­s in intelligen­t manufactur­ing and join hands with us to accelerate the transforma­tion of China’s manufactur­ing sector.”

China is actively promoting the Made in China 2025 plan, in the hope of upgrading its sprawling manufactur­ing sector with cuttingedg­e technologi­es such as big data and artificial intelligen­ce.

“Foreign and Chinese enterprise­s will continue to be treated equally. Relevant policies and measures are applicable to all companies in China,” Li said.

The ministry has selected a group of foreign enterprise­s as model players in helping build smart plants in China. German companies SAP SE and Siemens AG and Japanese Li Dong, shipbuilde­r Heavy Industries among them.

Mark Gibbs, president of SAP Greater China, said the company is seeing new opportunit­ies from theMade in China 2025 strategy, which encourages more businesses to accelerate their digital transforma­tion.

SAP has a laboratory in Shanghai, its third-largest lab globally, which employs around 3,000 software engineers and business architects to offer localized industrial solutions.

According to Li, internatio­nal cooperatio­n is also highly valued when China is drafting industry standards and protecting intellectu­al properties.

To promote communicat­ion on standards for intelligen­t manufactur­ing, China has establishe­d a Sino-German standardiz­ation Kawasaki Ltd are working group with the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy in Germany, the German Institute for Standardiz­ation and other relevant organizati­ons.

“When implementi­ng the Made in China 2025 strategy, we will take advantage of both domestic and foreign resources, in a move to strike a balance between nurturing homegrown innovation while expanding internatio­nal cooperatio­n,” Li said.

Last year, the MIIT chose 14 model projects of SinoGerman intelligen­t manufactur­ing cooperatio­n, which include the manufactur­ing solution developed by Siemens.

Zhu Xiaoxun, senior vicepresid­ent of Siemens China, said the company opened an industrial facility at its Wuhan Innovation Center in Hubei province in January, in order to get more involved in theMade in China 2025 initiative.

“TheWuhan facility will be geared to the needs of local industries to provide such services as innovation project incubation, profession­al training and technical consulting for small and medium-sized enterprise­s,” Zhu said.

Siemens will also work with local companies to build digitizati­on laboratori­es, intelligen­t water-testing laboratori­es, industrial hardware and software platforms and expert networks.

Foreign and Chinese enterprise­s will continue to be treated equally.” director of the industrial equipment department at the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology

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