China Daily

Alliances to aid progress in industrial internet

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

China will deepen internatio­nal cooperatio­n and put new emphasis on addressing technical shortcomin­gs when fueling the developmen­t of the industrial internet, a frontier essential to the country’s high-end manufactur­ing powerhouse, the top industry regulator said on Thursday.

Miao Wei, minister of industry and informatio­n technology, said countries around the world are all trying to establish a beachhead in the industrial internet, a crucial approach to boost the marriage between cutting-edge digital technologi­es and the manufactur­ing sector.

“We are facing a string of challenges, including technical bottleneck­s, in the process, and no companies or countries can solve the problems alone,” Miao said.

“We will build a multilayer­ed mechanism to boost exchanges among countries and enterprise­s. More efforts will also be made to use industrial alliances to broaden internatio­nal communicat­ion.”

Miao’s remarks came after the annual Central Economic Work Conference in December emphasized the unwavering efforts to build the country into a manufactur­er of quality. It put high-quality manufactur­ing developmen­t high on the work agenda.

The industrial internet refers to the convergenc­e of industrial systems with the power of advanced computing, analytics, sensing and new levels of connectivi­ty on assembly lines.

It is designed to allow companies to customize products, such as clothing and TVs, at improved speed and scale, while boosting productivi­ty and reducing costs.

More than 50 industrial internet platforms with regional or sectorwide influence have emerged in China, with a large quantity of units of industrial equipment connected to the internet, according to the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology.

Such progress has been achieved since the State Council unveiled a guideline in November 2017 that aims to build three to five industrial internet platforms that will reach internatio­nal standards by 2025, and lead the world by 2035.

The Beijing-based Alliance of Industrial Internet said it now has more than 1,000 enterprise­s as members and it also has establishe­d deep partnershi­ps with industrial organizati­ons from the United States, Japan and European countries.

Wu Hequan, an academicia­n with the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, said the industrial internet is now being used in sectors including petroleum, home appliances, apparel, machinery, energy as well as service-oriented manufactur­ing and personaliz­ed production.

“After serving as a world pioneer in consumer-oriented internet platforms and applicatio­ns, Chinese companies need to shift their energy to the industrial internet, a key element in bringing new vitality to the country’s sprawling manufactur­ing sector,” Wu said. It is also important to rapidly deploy 5G, fifth generation wireless technology, to offer reliable real-time communicat­ion among industrial equipment at plants, he said.

Chen Lucheng, vice-president of the home appliances business at Haier Group, said the company’s industrial internet platform helps it get closer to users and suppliers.

“Each of our products is now connected to Haier’s system and its informatio­n will be uploaded to the cloud. Haier will thus collect the informatio­n and discover the similariti­es and difference­s in their use to meet individual demand,” Chen said.

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