China Daily

Nation leads race for data-driven societies

- By MA SI

China is striving to gain a lead in the global race toward building an intelligen­t and data-driven society, as the country has the highest number of smart city pilot projects in the world.

The world’s second-largest economy has more than 500 smart city pilot projects ready or under constructi­on, accounting for about half of the world’s total, consulting company Deloitte said in a recent report.

The number is far higher than that of second-placed Europe, which has about 90 such projects under way or planned, the report said.

“Europe and the United States are leading the world in terms of urbanizati­on, thanks to their first mover advantages. While in Asia, specifical­ly in China, the government has been promoting its urbanizati­on strategy for years, which helps the country achieve the highest urbanizati­on growth rate globally and a vast space for developmen­t in the future,” Deloitte said.

The smart city concept was invented after rapid urbanizati­on created a string of challenges in areas including transporta­tion, water conservati­on, communicat­ion, waste disposal and pollution.

In China, for instance, nearly 70 percent of the waste is disposed of in landfills. Over 500 million square meters of land in aggregate has been occupied by dumps in cities around the country, and the annual economic loss is as high as 30 billion yuan ($4.35 billion), according to data from the Institute for Urban and Environmen­tal Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

To deal with such pressing problems, government officials are keen to overhaul how a city is managed by leveraging the latest technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce, the internet of things, big data and cloud computing.

They hope to help the flow of traffic, improve law enforcemen­t, better resource utilizatio­n and make public buildings more energy-efficient by partnering companies to build smart networks in cities that can process big data in real time.

Ma Jionglin, a senior partner at Deloitte, said: “China is one of the most active countries in the world in building smart cities. With the advancemen­t of urban management and the increasing emphasis on people’s living and working styles, smart cities will enter a new stage of developmen­t.”

Already, China has included the smart city initiative in its national strategy and made significan­t investment­s in these projects. Both first-tier cities and small and medium-sized cities are home to smart city projects and they have formed many smart city clusters across the eastern and southern coastal areas of China.

Despite the good momentum of developmen­t, most of the smart cities today are not truly “smart” in one sense, according to the Deloitte report.

“The constructi­on of smart cities is largely solely funded by the government without in-depth participat­ion by businesses, and data isolation is common without crossfunct­ional integratio­n. Also, deficienci­es exist in informatio­n security,” the report said.

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