China Daily (Hong Kong)

Baidu’s Li makes a case for using emerging tech to sustain innovation

- By OUYANG SHIJIA ouyangshij­ia@chinadaily.com.cn

China should speed up the commercial­ization of autonomous vehicles and deploy smart transport systems using emerging technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce and 5G, Chinese internet tycoon Robin Li said on Wednesday.

“Low-carbon transport, accelerate­d commercial­ization of autonomous driving and the use of techenable­d smart transport will ease traffic congestion, provide convenient and environmen­tally-friendly travel options and achieve the carbon dioxide emission targets,” said Li, chairman and CEO of internet search giant Baidu Inc.

Li, who is also a member of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, said the government must boost policy innovation, establish a large-scale commercial promotion mechanism for autonomous driving with the participat­ion of government­s at all levels, enterprise­s, universiti­es and research institutes, and encourage research and developmen­t, and innovation in the autonomous driving sector.

Baidu has already made a name for itself in AI after years of heavy investment in technologi­es like smart cloud and autonomous driving. During the fourth quarter of the last fiscal year, Baidu spent 5.7 billion yuan ($881 million) on research and developmen­t, up 19 percent on a yearly basis.

Stressing the importance of developing the smart economy and accelerati­ng the developmen­t of AI will be the main focal points for Li at the upcoming two sessions. He plans to submit five proposals during the sessions, with three of them dealing with AI.

Emerging technologi­es are gradually playing a vital role in China’s high-quality developmen­t due to the advantages and high efficiency that innovation can bring to the entire society. The central government has reiterated that it would give priority to strategic technologi­es such as AI in the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25).

According to a new report released by the China Center for Informatio­n Industry Developmen­t, AI will provide underlying support for the developmen­t of the smart economy and industrial digitaliza­tion, promoting deeper integratio­n of AI and fields such as 5G,

cloud computing and the internet of things.

During the first six months of last year, the total scale of China’s core AI industries reached 77 billion yuan, with the number of AI companies exceeding 260, making the country a major hub for AI unicorns, said the report citing official data.

Li said AI-powered smart elderly care services must be promoted across the nation as the country’s population is aging rapidly.

“Around 90 percent of China’s seniors live and receive care at home, while 7 percent stay at communityb­ased centers and 3 percent at nursing homes. However, only a very small part of urban community can afford elderly care services. Considerin­g that there are insufficie­nt human resources for community-based elderly

care, deployment of smart speakers and other similar smart devices will help make the lives of elderly people much more easier.”

He suggested promoting elderly care technologi­es and applicatio­ns including health management equipment, accelerati­ng the constructi­on of a comprehens­ive management informatio­n service platform for the elderly for medical care at home, emergency calls and other services.

According to Li, more efforts are also needed to build a multilevel education system to meet the increasing demand for AI talents, promote the free flow of informatio­n and data between different internet platforms, strengthen data sharing regulation­s and offer cybersecur­ity training for students.

 ?? ZHAI HUIYONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Children interact with a Baidu robot during an expo in Wuzhen, Zhejiang province.
ZHAI HUIYONG / FOR CHINA DAILY Children interact with a Baidu robot during an expo in Wuzhen, Zhejiang province.
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