China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Hefei, the city ‘where a lot is happening’

- By ANDREW MOODY and ZHU LIXIN

Growing plants with less water could be a vital breakthrou­gh for a country like China that is often faced with chronic water shortages.

Angkefeng Optoelectr­onics Technology, a startup based in the Institute of Advanced Technology incubator in Hefei, Anhui province, is one company trying to make this a reality

It has developed a film that, when put on glass, refracts light so that plants in greenhouse environmen­ts can grow with less water. The refracted light can also be turned into electricit­y.

Li Ming, 33, who is one of the company’s founders, says the fact that Hefei has been made a pilot city for the government’s Made in China 2025 strategy could be important for the business as it develops.

“As a result of the strategy, we will be able to get funding from the institute and guidance in running the business. Startups like us see it as a great opportunit­y,” he says.

Li founded the business, which now employs 20 people, in 2012 with Zhang Fanxin, 37, a fellow PhD student at the University of Science and Technology; their academic supervisor, Liu Wen, 57, who also is an investor; and Yan Ru, 36, who is in charge of marketing. They also received 30 million yuan ($4.54 million) in venture capital funding.

“The problem for us is that, although we are doing cutting-edge research, we don’t know how to run a business. That is why working in this incubator works for us.”

JEE Automation, one of Hefei’s leading companies, is also making breakthrou­ghs.

It makes assembly lines for some of the world’s leading automotive companies, including PSA Peugeot Citroen and Jaguar Land Rover.

It recently made China’s first assembly line — for aluminum car bodies — that operates with just robots, with no need for humans.

The company, which was founded in 2005 and now employs 1,350, has boosted its investment in research and developmen­t over the past five years from 6 percent of turnover to 10 percent.

Michael Wang, general manager and one of the company’s original eight founders, says the national strategy will be a major encouragem­ent.

“We can only get financial support if our technologi­es continue to be cutting-edge. With a business like this, we always have to keep ahead and invest for the future,” he says.

Industrial upgrading is not restricted to technologi­es of the future, but also involves traditiona­l businesses.

Anhui Heli, which makes forklift trucks, launched its first self-driving truck last year, and a subsidiary of Copenhagen-based Maersk Group was its first customer.

Ma Qingfeng, the company’s 53-year-old chief engineer, who was wearing the same blue uniform as all staff members, says that being on top of new technologi­es is vital for the company.

“We have made efforts to improve the human-machine interactio­n and the intelligen­t management systems of the forklift trucks using internet of things technology,” he says.

“The Made in China strategy makes all companies target improving their technologi­es, and in that way it is not just good for us, but for all businesses.”

The company, which is based in the Hefei Economic and Technologi­cal Developmen­t Area and invests 3.6 percent of its turnover in research and developmen­t, expects to export 16,000 trucks this year out of a total production of 100,000. This is up from 13,000 in 2016.

Ma, who has worked for the company for 31 years and is a graduate of Hefei University of Technology, says the company is working in a very competitiv­e market.

“China is a completely open market in this sector. All of the world’s 10 largest forklift truck manufactur­ers are competing in this country,” he says.

“There has always been a problem in this market in that we are all producing similar products, so it is very important for us to differenti­ate ourselves.”

 ?? ZHU LIXIN/CHINA DAILY ?? Angkefeng Optoelectr­onics Technology has developed a film that, when put on glass, refracts light so that plants in greenhouse environmen­ts can grow with less water. The refracted light can also be turned into electricit­y.
ZHU LIXIN/CHINA DAILY Angkefeng Optoelectr­onics Technology has developed a film that, when put on glass, refracts light so that plants in greenhouse environmen­ts can grow with less water. The refracted light can also be turned into electricit­y.

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