China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Common standards to lift tech ties with Germany

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

More efforts are needed to find common technical standards for Industry 4.0, so as to further the cooperatio­n between China and Germany on leveraging cutting-edge technologi­es to upgrade manufactur­ing, a renowned German expert said.

Industry 4.0 is roughly defined as the transforma­tion of industrial manufactur­ing and production systems by introducin­g new technologi­es.

Clas Neumann, senior vicepresid­ent of German software and cloud service giant SAP, said: “We need standards for data transmissi­on, and for data between machines and software. Only with common technical standards, we can easily apply innovation­s from Germany to China and the other way around.”

According to him, mutual trust is the foundation for partnershi­p, and finding common technical standards is important to further the existing cooperatio­n between China and Germany on Industry 4.0.

“If everybody works in different standards, the work will be far more complex,” said Neumann, who is also the head of Global SAP Labs Network, the core research and developmen­t entity of SAP with 20 research and developmen­t centers in 17 countries around the world.

Neumann said that there are several things that China and Germany can learn from each other. Germany, for instance, is a leader in setting industrial standards, and in China, the drive for digitaliza­tion is very quick and there is a high willingnes­s to digitalize processes and to test certain technologi­es such as block chain.

Currently, SAP is partnering with the Shenyang Institute of Automation in China to support agile manufactur­ing and internet services to promote automated manufactur­ing in China.

Yu Haibin, head of the Shenyang Institute of Automation, said the institute has decades of experience in engineerin­g and intelligen­t systems. The partnershi­p with SAP can lead to more cutting-edge products that can help boost China’s manufactur­ing capability.

SAP is now integratin­g its software with robots and other hardware developed by the Shenyang Institute of Automation so that assembly lines can be more agile and flexible.

The German company’s labs in the country have more than 3,500 employees and 97 percent of them are Chinese talent. “China is striving for the best digital solutions and worldleadi­ng practices which can be applied to other countries around the world,” Neumann said. “We are now innovating in China for China and the world.”

The China Academy of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology, a think tank affiliated with the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, recently unveiled a white paper to summarize the progress of China-German ties on Industry 4.0.

The white paper said Germany places more emphasis on the use of the internet of things technologi­es in manufactur­ing while China’s industrial internet initiative covers not only manufactur­ing, but also includes energy, healthcare, architectu­re and other sectors.

More efforts can be made to strengthen communicat­ion between China and Germany on setting industrial standards and data protection, the white paper said.

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