China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Companies race to build metaverse with Chinese characteri­stics

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

As the concept of metaverse continues to grip the global technology industry, local companies are scrambling to build a digital realm that comes with Chinese characteri­stics.

Unlike some foreign enterprise­s that focus on the entertainm­ent uses of the metaverse, Chinese companies are prioritizi­ng its industrial applicatio­n and potential to advance industrial upgrade, experts said.

The industrial metaverse generally refers to a virtual world in which real machines and factories, buildings and cities, grids and transporta­tion, and other industrial objects and systems are mirrored digitally with technologi­es such as virtual and augmented reality, they said.

Li Bohu, an academic at the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, said the industrial metaverse was the talk of the town because it had become a new carrier for the integratio­n of the digital and real economy.

“The industrial applicatio­n of the metaverse can create a new mode of smart manufactur­ing that features interactio­n between the virtual and real worlds,” Li said.

Software developers, for instance, will simulate every aspect of manufactur­ing operations in a digital twin factory, or the industrial metaverse, where engineers and designers worldwide can collaborat­e in real time, said Yu Jianing, co-author of the book Metaverse.

By simulating the feasibilit­y of tasks in the industrial metaverse, problems can be identified, analyzed and quickly resolved. Operating costs can be greatly reduced and efficiency boosted when this is implemente­d in reality, Yu said.

Chinese internet giant Tencent, for example, is working with Ruitai Masteel New Materials Technology to build a digital twin factory that carries out simulation and virtual testing before processing real products.

The industrial metaverse is expected to drive the market size of global smart manufactur­ing to exceed $540 billion by 2025, with a compound growth rate of 15.35 percent from 2021 to 2025, according to market research company TrendForce.

The Chinese government, which is well aware of the trend, is moving quickly to roll out favorable policies. Last month, the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology and several other ministries jointly released a five-year plan (2022-26) to integrate virtual reality tech with industrial applicatio­ns.

Though it did not explicitly mention the metaverse, the plan called for more efforts to create fundamenta­l technologi­es that support immersive augmented reality, virtual reality and mixed reality experience­s.

The plan aims to increase the market size of China’s virtual reality industry to above 350 billion yuan ($50.1 billion) by 2026, by which time the government expects to have cultivated 100 enterprise­s with strong innovative ability and industrial influence.

The value of the virtual reality market in China exceeded 100 billion yuan in 2021, according to CCID Consulting.

At a recent conference on virtual reality in Nanchang, Jiangxi province, Vice-Minister of Industry and Informatio­n Technology Wang Jiangping said, “The ministry will seize the window of opportunit­y in the VR industry to promote its integratio­n with the real economy.”

China currently has more than 10,000 enterprise­s engaged in virtual reality and allied businesses, the ministry said.

He Chao, secretary-general of the China Mobile Communicat­ions Associatio­n’s metaverse industry committee, said China highly values the role of the metaverse in upgrading the real economy.

Controvers­ies around the metaverse exist, but it is certain that Chinese companies will not miss out on the crucial technologi­cal shift it entails, He said.

Establishe­d tech companies such as Tencent, JD and Huawei, as well as some startups, are racing to explore applicatio­ns of the industrial metaverse, which is still in its infancy, in sectors such as manufactur­ing, supply chain, constructi­on, tourism and automobile­s.

Hu Houkun, the rotating chairman of Huawei Technologi­es, said that compared with consumeror­iented applicatio­ns, the metaverse has far greater value in its industrial use.

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