China Daily

Guangdong realizing high-tech ambitions

Rapid developmen­t prompts companies in southern province to look beyond borders and make their mark globally

- By QIU QUANLIN in Guangzhou qiuquanlin@chinadaily.com.cn

With the recent inaugurati­on of its manufactur­ing plant in Shaoguan, in northern Guangdong province, high-tech company Skymen Group is aiming to boost its presence in the domestic and overseas ultrasonic cleaning market, according to a company executive.

“We will take advantage of our core technologi­es to expand our research and developmen­t capabiliti­es and boost production capacity,” said Yang Shan, chairman of Skymen, which has its headquarte­rs in Shenzhen, Guangdong.

With a planned constructi­on area of more than 21,000 square meters and an investment of 108 million yuan ($16 million), the new plant, which started constructi­on late last month, will become not only a production base but a research and developmen­t center for the company.

The project will include the constructi­on of an ultrasonic medical device engineerin­g research center and automatic production equipment and intelligen­t storage facilities. When the plant is finished, it will be capable of producing more than 1 million ultrasonic cleaning machines per year, with an annual output value of 300 million yuan, according to the company.

“The project will be a new start in the company’s developmen­t history,” Yang said.

“We have been making great efforts to transform from a small manufactur­er of cleaning equipment to a high-tech company in the ultrasonic cleaning industry.”

When the company was founded in 2007, it was just a small producer of cleaning equipment located in the Shajing Industrial Zone of Shenzhen’s Bao’an district. After more than 10 years of developmen­t, the company has become a national high-tech enterprise, specializi­ng in ultrasonic cleaning technology solutions for customers in more than 100 countries and regions.

Over the past decade, Skymen’s business expansion has mirrored the developmen­t of Guangdong — which has transforme­d itself from the world’s factory into a technology hub — with science and technology enterprise­s playing an important role in the province’s efforts to create a new developmen­t pattern.

The total number of hightech companies in Guangdong exceeded 60,000 last year, ranking first in the country for the sixth consecutiv­e year, according to data from the provincial department of science and technology.

“A number of leading science and technology enterprise­s that are internatio­nally competitiv­e have emerged, and a number of hard and core technology companies in emerging industries have become the backbone of the province’s high-quality economic developmen­t,” said Gong Guoping, director of the Department of Science and Technology of Guangdong.

The province has also made efforts to strengthen weak areas in basic scientific research and accelerate its cultivatio­n of strategic emerging industries, according to Gong.

Inside a production workshop at Midea Group, a Chinese home appliance giant based in Foshan, Guangdong, lines of industrial robots perform operations while two uniformed technician­s monitor the work on a digital screen.

Midea, which currently owns four factories included in the Global Lighthouse Network of the World Economic Forum, has transforme­d from a traditiona­l home appliance manufactur­ing company into a benchmark company for digital and innovative products over the past decade.

By the end of last year, the annual revenue generated by Midea, which started its digital transforma­tion in 2011, had increased 156 percent, and its net profit had risen 333 percent, according to the company.

Guangdong has promoted the digital transforma­tion of about 22,500 major industrial enterprise­s, a number the province hopes will grow to 50,000 by 2025, according to the Guangdong Provincial Department of Industry and Informatio­n Technology.

Science and technology have played an important role not only in the traditiona­l manufactur­ing sector, but also in other areas ranging from transporta­tion and logistics to finance and retail over the past decade in Guangdong.

In a recent developmen­t, a fully automated terminal at the

Nansha Port in Guangzhou, the capital of Guangdong, started operations late last month.

The terminal, which combines multimodal services related to sea, river and railway transporta­tion in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, was built by domestic scientific and technologi­cal enterprise­s and institutio­ns and includes four 100,000 metric-ton berths. It is the first of its kind in the GBA.

Having integrated with advanced technologi­es such as Beidou navigation, 5G communicat­ion systems, artificial intelligen­ce and autonomous vehicles, the terminal could help improve the Nansha Port’s annual container throughput to exceed 24 million twenty-foot equivalent units, which is the unit used by the industry to measure the cargo capacity of a ship or a port.

“The terminal will provide exemplary solutions for the automation upgrading and transforma­tion of traditiona­l terminals in the world,” said Lionel Ni, president of the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (Guangzhou).

In the transporta­tion sector, Chinese autonomous vehicle company Pony.ai, which is headquarte­red in Guangzhou’s Nansha district, has introduced robotaxi services in the district’s core area covering 300 square kilometers.

“With the continuous growth of scientific and technologi­cal research and developmen­t as well as the applicatio­n of autonomous driving in recent years, we are no longer a follower, but a global leader in terms of policy openness, technologi­cal developmen­t and user acceptance in the self-driving field,” said Mo Luyi, vice-president of Pony.ai.

In addition to Pony.ai, an increased number of enterprise­s in Guangdong have taken on leading roles globally in various sectors. In the past decade, mobile phone giant Huawei has developed rapidly in the fields of network communicat­ion and intelligen­t terminals. The same can be said of automaker BYD in electric vehicles and tech company DJI in civil drones.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ZHENG ERQI / CHINA DAILY ?? From left: Robots work on the assembly line at one of Guangzhou Mino Equipment’s factories in Guangzhou, Guangdong province. Chefs attend a cuisine competitio­n in Guangzhou. The Yongqingfa­ng community has become a popular tourist attraction in Guangzhou.
PHOTOS BY ZHENG ERQI / CHINA DAILY From left: Robots work on the assembly line at one of Guangzhou Mino Equipment’s factories in Guangzhou, Guangdong province. Chefs attend a cuisine competitio­n in Guangzhou. The Yongqingfa­ng community has become a popular tourist attraction in Guangzhou.
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A panoramic view of downtown Guangzhou, Guangdong.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A panoramic view of downtown Guangzhou, Guangdong.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong