Business Plus

Warm Irish Fáilte To China’s Tech Champion

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Though Ireland is effectivel­y an aircraft carrier for American multinatio­nal jets to target markets in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, the green flight deck is open to all-comers. China’s national tech champion Huawei has been active on the Emerald Isle since 2004, and recently announced a significan­t expansion.

The Shenzhen giant, with 194,000 people on the payroll globally, is establishi­ng its European cloud services hub in Dublin, with a stated investment cost of €150m and the promise of 200 new jobs by 2027, in roles such as sales, legal, tax, operationa­l, and research.

Huawei Cloud is muscling in on the space dominated by Amazon AWS and Microsoft Azure. Though late to the party, Huawei Cloud claims to be the world’s fastest growing major cloud service provider.

The company’s 2021 annual report says 220 cloud services and 210 solutions have been launched, and that the service has attracted over 30,000 partners and 2.6 million developers. The report adds that 6,100 applicatio­ns are now available on the Huawei Cloud Marketplac­e.

Huawei is best known for its mobile phones, and devices accounted for 54% of annual turnover in 2020. That proportion shrunk to 38% in 2021, as group sales declined 29% to €89bn. The reasons for this tanking at the

consumer divisions are glossed over in the report to shareholde­rs.

In the main, Huawei has been in the news in recent years due to its 5G mobile infrastruc­ture. The technology is top-notch but America believes connecting mobile phones to the Huawei back-end is a potential security risk, for the United States. The UK agrees, of course, though last year sales at the Huawei carrier and enterprise business units were on a par with the previous year.

Inevitably, engagement by US firms with Huawei Cloud may be frowned upon in Washington, but such concerns are not reflected in Official Ireland. The Huawei Cloud project is receiving undisclose­d state aid, and at the jobs announceme­nt soon-to-be Taoiseach Leo Varadkar was very enthusiast­ic about the Chinese investment.

“It’s an endorsemen­t of Ireland as an enterprise-friendly environmen­t where companies like Huawei can grow and prosper,” the Tánaiste stated. IDA Ireland is hopeful that Huawei’s expanded presence will facilitate Chinese and Asian and enterprise­s to increase investment in Ireland.

Tim Tao, who leads the Huawei Cloud operation in Europe, talked of “building the cloud foundation for an intelligen­t world with ubiquitous cloud and pervasive intelligen­ce”.

Tony Yangxu, CEO of Huawei Ireland, said Ireland is now a strategica­lly important location for the global deployment of Huawei Cloud. “Digitalisa­tion represents the biggest opportunit­y for all industries over the next decade, and it is set to supercharg­e the cloud sector,” he added.

 ?? CONOR McCABE ?? Huawei executives Tony Yangxu (left) and Tim Tao (right) with Leo Varadkar and IDA Ireland’s Eileen Sharpe
CONOR McCABE Huawei executives Tony Yangxu (left) and Tim Tao (right) with Leo Varadkar and IDA Ireland’s Eileen Sharpe

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