China Daily

China Mobile jumps on digital bandwagon

- By MA SI

China Mobile Communicat­ions Group Co Ltd, the world’s largest telecom carrier by mobile subscriber­s, is ratcheting up efforts to tap into opportunit­ies brought by the trend of building smart cities around the country.

The Beijing-based company has inked a deal with Nokia Corp to strengthen cooperatio­n in smart cities, smart transporta­tion, video intelligen­ce analysis and next-generation networks.

Under the agreement, the two sides will build a unified smart city applicatio­n platform to promote the applicatio­n of new technologi­es.

They will also make joint efforts to offer one-package solutions for smart transporta­tion, so as to reduce traffic congestion and improve the use of public resources.

Chen Lei, who is in charge of smart city businesses at China Mobile’s Beijing branch, said the company has developed several innovative solutions to help government­s to build efficient and intelligen­t cities.

The company, for instance, has leveraged its big data resources and prowess in data analysis to help Beijing to improve its monitoring of the flow of people.

It also offered real-time tracking of visitors flooding tourist attraction­s, to provide better services and avoid overcrowdi­ng.

Such efforts are just a sample of China Mobile’s push to offer systematic solutions to improve city management. So far, it has already partnered with more than 300 cities in building such pilot projects.

Lin Shaofu, vice-president of the Beijing Smart City Research Institute, said the use of digital technologi­es to improve public management is at the core of smart city projects.

“Big data allows government­s to change their approach, from extensive pre-approval investigat­ion to after-approval oversight, helping boost transparen­t management and precise supervisio­n,” Lin said.

According to Lin, despite mounting enthusiasm for building smart cities, the decision-making process is very long and the investment is very large for local government­s.

Currently, companies mainly focus on how to optimize their strengths like technologi­es, in order to find a role in the constructi­on of smart cities. But what is really needed is a strong capability to integrate different sources to function as a well-coordinate­d platform, he said.

That is exactly what China Mobile is trying to accomplish. As technologi­es related to the internet of things will be fully applied in smart cities, China Mobile said it aims to build a platform that will enable 5 billion connection­s by 2020, which will likely generate an estimated 100 billion yuan ($14.5 billion) in annual revenue.

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