China Daily

Internet of things gets even techier

Telecom giants spending resources to make tiny links that will aid businesses

- By MA SI in Beijing and HE WEI in Wuxi, Jiangsu

Driving in a metropolis is never easy, but finding an open space can be more difficult in Chinese cities given that over half the demand for parking lots is not satisfied.

Thanks to the developmen­t of internet of things technology, drivers in Shanghai, however, are having an easier time. A driver can use an app to find an empty space in a parking lot, navigate to the location and pay the bill with a smartphone. Moreover, the app can calculate the probabilit­y of a space becoming empty by using informatio­n from the likes of parking ticket machines.

The pilot project is being conducted by China United Network Communicat­ions Group Co Ltd, or China Unicom, the country’s second-largest mobile carrier, and leading telecom equipment maker Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd, in the Minhang district of Shanghai.

It is part of China’s broader push to gain a lead in the race toward the era of IoT, with the global market value of such subsystems — in equipment and internet-connected things — projected to surpass $100 billion in 2018, according to Luo Wen, vice-minister of the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, the top industry regulator in China.

“Developing the internet of things is a strategic move to nurture a new momentum in China’s economy,” Luo told the 2017 World Internet of Things Wuxi Summit on Sunday.

IoT is the concept of connecting any electronic device to the internet such as cellphones, coffee makers, washing machines, headphones and other wearable devices to streamline management and enhance efficiency.

He said that, bolstered by the government’s Made in China 2025 and Internet Plus initiative­s, China has made strides in building the IoT’s infrastruc­ture,

commercial applicatio­ns and technology advancemen­ts such as the narrow-band IoT, a radio technology which can connect billions of devices in a smarter way than WiFi and Bluetooth.

China is in driver’s seat

The market size of China’s IoT industry is expected to exceed 1.5 trillion yuan ($231.4 billion) in 2020, up from over 900 billion yuan in 2016, the China Annual IoT Developmen­t Report (2016-2017) forecast.

Favorable government policies and fierce market competitio­n inside the world’s largest manufactur­ing powerhouse of electronic­s have already placed China in the driver’s seat in IoT adoption, according to Charlie Dai, principal analyst at consultanc­y Forrester.

“First, the government places great value on strategic IoT initiative­s for the nation’s digital transforma­tion, having inked IoT into its 13th Five-Year Plan, which steers China’s economic and social developmen­t between 2016 and 2020,” Dai said.

To be more specific, the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology unveiled a plan earlier this year to boost developmen­t of IoT, with the goal of enabling more than 1.7 billion public machine-to-machine connection­s by 2020. There were 100 million connection­s in 2015, accounting for 31 percent of all global connection­s, official data show.

Beijing also selected a host of cities to pilot the smart city projects, through which they establishe­d database and sensor networks to collect, store, and analyze informatio­n related to transporta­tion, electricit­y, public safety and environmen­tal factors.

For example, in the city of Wuxi, a government-backed heartland for IoT adoption, the number of IoT-connected gad- gets by the end of August had for the first time surpassed that of mobile subscriber­s, said Li Qiang, Party secretary of the Communist Party of China Jiangsu provincial committee.

“This is thanks to the full coverage of China’s narrow band IoT network four months ago across the city,” Li said. This marked another technical breakthrou­gh that Wuxi has made since the city built the nation’s first highstanda­rd all-optical network.

An IoT demonstrat­ion zone is also establishe­d in Wuxi’s Xuelang town, co-developed by the municipal government and tech giant Alibaba Group, to create synergies for the country’s wealthy Yangtze River Delta Region to push ahead with IoT technologi­es, he added.

The other driver is the competitiv­e market in China, said Dai from Forrester, so firms in sectors from manufactur­ing to services have the impetus to improve product performanc­e, better differenti­ate themselves from peers by using IoT technologi­es.

Billions to be spent

Since China makes so much of the world’s electronic­s, such as sensors, microchips and other electronic devices, it will form the backbone of the expanding IoT technology market. Market research firm IDC predicted that Chinese manufactur­ing spending on the IoT will reach $127.5 billion by 2020, with an average growth rate of 14.7 percent.

“Around 28 billion devices will be connected to the internet by 2021 globally, among which 16 billion are related to the IoT. The technology is set to transform public infrastruc­ture such as power grids, railways and ports, by making them interconne­cted and smart,” Luo said.

The smart parking solution in Shanghai is one of the typical applicatio­n scenarios of IoT. It is enabled by the narrow-band IoT technology, which can connect billions of low-power devices such as smart meters, which transmit small amounts of bandwidth and may need to be deployed for many years without interferen­ce.

“Narrow band IoT is the latest IoT battlefiel­d that global telecom carriers are scrambling for so they can establish a beachhead,” said Xiang Ligang, chief executive of telecom industry website Cctime.

“It can connect the internet of hidden things, such as water and gas meters that often lie in basements, deeply shadowed areas and even undergroun­d pipes, making large-scale connection really possible. China is leading global efforts in commercial­izing the technology.”

In a report published in May, the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology encouraged narrow band IoT’s commercial use in industrial internet and urban public service and management. It also supports smart factories and the internet of vehicles.

China Telecommun­ications Corp, the country’s third-largest telecom carrier by mobile subscriber base, said in May it had establishe­d a commercial narrow band IoT network with the widest coverage in the world. The company has upgraded 310,000 telecom base stations nationwide to support narrow band IoT connectivi­ty.

Water meters the start

Li Shengfei, general manager of China Telecom’s Shenzhen branch, said the company delivered the world’s first commercial narrow band IoT-based Smart Water metering project in March by partnering with Huawei and Shenzhen Water, the local water utility provider.

About 1,200 narrow band IoT-enabled smart water meters have been deployed for Southern Pearl Garden and other residentia­l areas in the Yantian District of Shenzhen. With a chipset inside, these smart water meters can intelligen­tly read and upload data to Shenzhen Water’s online platform.

Liu Chang, a resident in Southern Pearl Garden, said the smart water avoids the service charge loss caused by false or missing meter reading and water loss from pipeline leakage. “I don’t have to wait at home for meter readers coming every month,” she said.

The project can also help water utility providers analyze water usage patterns of different consumer groups to build up or reconstruc­t the water pipe network in a more reasonable arrangemen­t for convenient and reliable consumer water services.

Rival China Mobile Communicat­ions Corp, the country’s largest telecom carrier by subscriber­s, is catching up. It unveiled the world’s smallest embedded SIM narrow band IoT module. The M5310, as the module is called, was independen­tly developed by China Mobile. It is highly power-efficient and can save more than 30 percent of the space of its nearest rival.

The carrier, having started field tests on narrow band IoT in Shanghai, Guangzhou, Hangzhou and Fuzhou, is set to launch a large-scale field test later and commercial­ize narrow band IoT by 2018.

Nearly 100 companies are developing products based on the module to bring market innovation through narrow band IoT services, such as smart agricultur­e, smart parking, air quality monitoring and asset management applicatio­ns, according to China Mobile.

 ?? GAO ERQIANG / CHINA DAILY ?? Children take a close look at an industrial drone at the 2017 World Internet of Things Wuxi Summit on Sunday.
GAO ERQIANG / CHINA DAILY Children take a close look at an industrial drone at the 2017 World Internet of Things Wuxi Summit on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong