China Daily

Expo aims to push Made in China 2025 blueprint

- By WANG XIN wangxin@chinadaily.com.cn

“Smart manufactur­ing” will be highlighte­d at the Internatio­nal Exhibition of Inventions 2016, which is slated to take place in November in Kunshan, Jiangsu province, the event’s organizers said.

The new exhibition section at this year’s Kunshan invention expo is designed to help advance the “Made in China 2025” blueprint, a national 10-year plan that aims to join the world’s manufactur­ing powerhouse­s with a focus on improved automation and eco-friendly industrial­ization, said Yu Huazhong, secretaryg­eneral of the China Associatio­n of Inventions, at a news conference in Beijing last week.

“A batch of excellent projects in a variety of fields including big data, artificial intelligen­ce, cloud computing and internet plus will be displayed to showcase the genuine progress that has been made in the smart manufactur­ing industry,” Yu said.

The expo, which will cover an area of 24,000 square meters and feature more than 800 booths, will also include a special area to showcase innovation achievemen­ts from hackerspac­es in China and abroad and an experience zone to allow visitors to explore novelties such as space vehicles and other products using virtual reality and augmented reality technologi­es.

The biennial event, co-hosted by CAI and the Internatio­nal Federation of Inventors’ Associatio­ns, aims to promote mass entreprene­urship and innovation, as well as China’s innovation-driven developmen­t and national intellectu­al property strategies, Yu noted.

Before it became a biennial event in 1992, the Kunshan expo was held every four years and was therefore regarded as the Olympics of the invention sphere, Yu said.

The previous eight sessions have displayed some 180,000 items and drawn participan­ts from around 200 countries and regions.

This year’s expo is expected to attract participan­ts from more than 40 countries and regions, Yu said.

“I hope the event can provide a venue for exchanges between inventors from around the world, bringing overseas technologi­cal expertise to local markets and helping advanced technologi­es from China go global,” the secretary-general said.

Internatio­nal organizati­ons including the Internatio­nal Federation of Inventors’ Associatio­ns, the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on, the Committee of the Internatio­nal Exhibition of Inventions of Geneva, and the Macao Foundation, as well as renowned Chinese companies, trade associatio­ns and foreign nationals will set up respective funds to recognize outstandin­g inventors and their innovative projects.

“In addition, we will arrange dialogues between inventors and financers, local government­s and interested companies to facilitate the funding of projects,” Yu said.

He said he hopes that the awards and dialogues on financing will help the commercial­ization and industrial­ization of the innovation­s and inventions on display.

Chen Xiuwen, deputy mayor of the host city, told the media that the Kunshan government has long valued the expo industry, and has developed more than 200,000 square meters of meeting facilities and expo venues.

Hosting the invention expo dovetails perfectly with Kunshan’s strategy of exploring a new developmen­t path toward opening-up, integratio­n, innovation and excellence, Chen said.

Secretary-General Yu said: “Our shared goal is to develop the event so that it becomes Jiangsu’s calling card on the internatio­nal invention landscape.”

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