China Daily (Hong Kong)

HKSTP intensifie­s smart tech push

Science park steps up bid to revive manufactur­ing as part of the goal to position city as global technology hub

- Editor’s note: By ZHANG TIANYUAN in Hong Kong tianyuanzh­ang@chinadaily­hk.com

In this installmen­t of the series, the chairman of the Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corp describes the infrastruc­ture support for enhancing inno-tech and manufactur­ing sectors he has witnessed in the city.

With the necessary space and infrastruc­ture in place, Hong Kong will be better positioned to develop the innovation and technology sector as well as accelerate the progress of its economy in coming decades.

Sunny Chai Ngai-chiu, chairman of Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corp, made the prediction on the cusp of the 25th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region.

The HKSTP has intensifie­d its efforts to revive local manufactur­ing sector by upgrading industrial facilities and setting transforma­tion guidelines as part of its goal to help position Hong Kong as a global technology engine. Chai said that the HKSTP aims to build a “solid” infrastruc­ture of the innovation and technology ecosystem developmen­t, from research to commercial­ization and manufactur­ing.

The SAR government disclosed the outline of reindustri­alization for the first time in its 2016 Policy Address, illustrati­ng that the HKSTP — the government-run company incubating the high-tech startups’ ecosystem — will construct new buildings “for lease to innovation and technology industries”, and “promote smart production, attract high value-added technology industries as well as high value-added manufactur­ing processes”.

Over the past five years, the SAR government has poured more than HK$150 billion ($19.1 billion) and allocated land resources into the innovation and technology sector, including the 87-hectare Hong KongShenzh­en Innovation and Technology Park as well as providing about 150 hectares to develop the San Tin Technopole.

In alignment with the government’s policies, the HKSTP in April unveiled the Advanced Manufactur­ing Centre at Tsang Kwan O InnoPark. The 2.71-hectare manufactur­ing center is set to provide services for logistics, warehousin­g, prototypin­g, low-volume assembly and cleanroom-enabled space.

Last year, the HKSTP transforme­d three industrial estates in Tai Po, Yuen Long and Tseung Kwan O as InnoParks to boost inno-techled manufactur­ing. The InnoParks will upgrade various sectors, such as pharmaceut­ical and biomedical production, through digitaliza­tion and precision manufactur­ing.

Chai said InnoParks “offer a high-spec, fully-serviced production base for advanced manufactur­ing and provide a foundation for Hong Kong’s mission to reindustri­alize and achieve technology-driven growth”.

The manufactur­ing sector used to be one of Hong Kong’s economic pillars in the 1970s and early ’80s. However, the city started putting an emphasis on the services sector, and an increasing number of manufactur­ers relocated their production lines northwards — to the Chinese mainland — to take advantage of more-affordable labor and land.

Today, the manufactur­ing sector accounts for only about 1 percent of Hong Kong’s GDP.

To address the significan­ce of the industrial sector in diversifyi­ng the economy, the new-term Hong Kong administra­tion, led by chief executive-designate John Lee Ka-chiu, is reorganizi­ng the Innovation and Technology Bureau into the Innovation, Technology and Industry Bureau effective July 1. Lee’s manifesto called to “encourage the commercial­ization of technology research results; develop high tech and high value-added manufactur­ing industries, … (and) harness technology effectivel­y”.

Chai said the HKSTP establishe­d eight guiding principles to underpin its reindustri­alization target: “output, investment in factories, high-skilled employment creation, product specificat­ions, advanced processes, research and developmen­t activities and capabiliti­es, local consumptio­n for stable supply chain and sustainabi­lity in terms of business, environmen­t, or resources”.

The HKSTP aims to build a solid infrastruc­ture of the innovation and technology ecosystem developmen­t, from research to commercial­ization and manufactur­ing.” Sunny Chai Ngai-chiu, chairman of Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corp

“These principles set the direction of supporting the upgrade and transforma­tion in the existing operations of companies in InnoParks, creating the fabric necessary to enable the productiza­tion of new technologi­es and world-class manufactur­ing of high value products, thereby generating new business opportunit­ies, high-skilled employment and a brighter future career for the young generation,” he said.

The blueprint of HKSTP facilities was unveiled in 1997, the year that the central government resumed the exercise of sovereignt­y over Hong Kong. It aims to help “position Hong Kong as a regional centre for research and developmen­t activities and innovation and technologi­cal developmen­t”, as a Hong Kong Legislativ­e Council document from 1997 showed.

During the past 25 years, the HKSTP has incubated around 1,100 startups and tech ventures from 24 countries and regions, accounting for nearly 30 percent of total startups in Hong Kong. Among them, three unicorns emerged — artificial intelligen­ce giant SenseTime, which went public on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange in December, raising funding of $2.6 billion; intelligen­t manufactur­ing technology company Smartmore, whose value grew more than $1 billion within 18 months; and smart logistics firm Lalamove, which expanded its footprint to more than 20 cities across the world.

Hong Kong has conceived 18 unicorns since 2017, according to Hong Kong Unicorns List Unicorns HK 2021, released by a local innovation charity foundation. In addition to homegrown unicorns, the HKSTP attracts overseas unicorns, such as Geek Plus Internatio­nal Co, focusing on robotics and AI, and Nium, a global platform for money movement, to nourish Hong Kong’s innotech ecosystem.

Chai said the HKSTP has also “built up Hong Kong’s largest R&D community of 17,000 people”, and he has witnessed a growing appetite to invest in local inno-tech startups.

“In the past four years, there were over 220 investment cases within the science park, raising HK$68 billion,” he said.

“The HKSTP Venture Fund totals over HK$600 million in assets under management. The fund has invested in 23 tech ventures, while the total amount of funding attracted by companies in the science park has accelerate­d in recent years.”

 ?? ??
 ?? Provided to China daily ?? An aerial view of the Hong Kong Science Park.
Provided to China daily An aerial view of the Hong Kong Science Park.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China