China International Big Data Industry Expo 2021 – 26-29 May 2021 – Guiyang
April 27, 2021 Category China News Round-up, Weekly
The four-day China International Big Data Industry Expo 2021 to be held in Guiyang, Guizhou province, from May 26 to 29 will be held both online and offline this year and showcase cutting-edge big data technologies. Chen Yan, Mayor of Guiyang, said this year’s expo is expected to attract more than 200 enterprises and institutions from various countries and regions. “Not only has the expo created opportunities for the development of big data in Guizhou province, but also contributed Chinese wisdom and solutions to the global big data industry,” Chen said. The event is part of larger efforts for innovative development in Guizhou province and aims to deepen the dual-circulation paradigm, Chen said.
Big data will offer strong impetus to the country’s digital transformation and development. “The expo will demonstrate the latest technology trends and pioneering research and development. It will also offer a chance for consumers and industry participants to observe and experience new applications and business models, as well as to promote international exchanges and cooperation,” he added. China is developing its digital economy and promoting deep integration of the internet, big data, artificial intelligence and the real economy. Nestled in a mountainous region, Guizhou has been striving over the past few years to become a global hub of big data, so as to help develop its local economy, boost employment and local residents’ earnings. Gui’an New Area, a national-level new urban area in Guizhou, plans to create a hub of 12 mega data centers and 4 million servers with a fixed-asset investment of over CNY40 billion by 2025.
Tao Changhai, Guizhou’s Vice Governor, said that Guizhou has unique advantages and conditions for the development of big data. It has attracted many large and super large data centers. More than 5,000 big data companies have been set up in the Gui’an New Area. The output of the area’s digital economy reached CNY164.9 billion last year, accounting for 38% of the region’s GDP, the China Daily reports.
Q1 figures show China strengthening IPR protection
Category China News Round-up, Weekly
China has strengthened the protection of intellectual property rights (IPRs) and stepped up efforts to crack down on crimes such as infringement and counterfeiting. In the first three months of this year, police nationwide resolved more than 3,800 cases of IPR infringement and counterfeiting, arresting about 8,200 suspects, according to the Ministry of Public Security (MPS). From 2016 to 2020, police across the country cracked more than 90,000 such cases, involving about CNY47 billion. More than 130,000 suspects were arrested. Prior to World Intellectual Property Day on April 26, the national leading group of fighting IPR infringements and counterfeits destroyed CNY700 million worth of infringing and counterfeit commodities in 16 provincial-level regions in the country. Lyu Wuqin, Director of the Ministry’s Food and Drug Crime Investigation Bureau, said IPR infringement and counterfeits disrupt market order, endanger people’s health and vital interests, and also impede scientific and technological progress. “Public security authorities are treating the legitimate rights and interests of all domestic and foreign enterprises in an equal manner, and have received letters of gratitude from many enterprises,” he said.
During last year’s Kunlun 2020 – an operation launched in May targeting IPR infringement and counterfeiting – about 25% of the clues to resolve 21,000 cases were provided by industrial regulators and administrative departments. Last week the MPS launched a new Kunlun 2021 operation to target infringement in fields including food and drugs, children’s products, copyrights, technological innovations and business secrets. Li Jiantao, Deputy Director of the Bureau, said the number of infringement cases is still large and they cover a wider range. Such illegal activities have gradually moved online and are better-organized with clear divisions of labor, he said.
In a typical case, police in Zhejiang province resolved a case of infringement of film and television copyright in February. The 19 suspects were accused of recording and spreading several movies shown during China’s Spring Festival. The suspects recorded the movies in the theater, showing them in their movie bars to earn profits, or contacted buyers through social media platforms and sold the films, according to the police. At the invitation of Interpol, Chinese police have also participated in a number of joint international law enforcement operations, the China Daily reports.
Tsinghua University establishes School of Integrated Circuits
Category China News Round-up, Weekly
Tsinghua University, one of China’s top universities, established the School of Integrated Circuits, the nation’s first, to target the research and training of technicians in semiconductors. The school aims to help the country resolve bottlenecks created by the U.S. restricting the export of high-tech products to China. Tsinghua University’s integrated circuits school will be the first in China to offer a specialized major in the subject. The school will focus on developing top-level research talent, and it will eventually offer Master’s degrees and PhDs, Qiu Yong, Principal of Tsinghua University, said at the school’s inauguration ceremony on April 22. The school aims to train high-level innovative technicians who are urgently needed in China to help to develop semiconductor manufacturing. The school will pursue breakthroughs in memory, processors, electronic design automation and semiconductor equipment, and commercialize its fundamental research, Chi Baoyong, Professor at the new school, said.
The integrated circuit is at the heart of all information technology industries, which have long relied on the West in some advanced areas. Given its great significance, the sector has become a target for the U.S. in its bullying of Chinese firms, the Global Times reports. China is lacking around 200,000 chip-related experts a year. “There were few schools, universities or even majors in the subject in China before the founding of Tsinghua University’s school,” Xiang Ligang, Director General of the Beijing-based Information Consumption Alliance, told the Global Times. Xiang said that chip-making requires experts in both design and manufacturing. “Computer engineers can take charge of the design process, while electrical engineers handle manufacturing.”
Tsinghua University is the country’s premium talent development base for the semiconductor sector, with more than 7,500 graduates since the establishment of its integrated circuits major in 1956. It is hoped that with the establishment of this school, the shortage of chips and technical problems can be alleviated. Jointly established by the Department of Microelectronics and Nano-electronics and the Department of Electronic Engineering of Tsinghua University, the new school will provide courses for students who major in related sectors including microelectronics and software engineering. More schools of this type are likely to be established as China goes full speed ahead in its industrial upgrade, the Global Times reports.
93 Chinese cities have more than 1 million inhabitants
Category China News Round-up, Weekly
With China’s rapid urbanization, more people are flowing into urban areas. According to official data, a total of 93 cities have an urban population of 1 million – four times the number 40 years ago. As the second and third biggest provinces in terms of GDP, Jiangsu and Shandong provinces, each have 10 cities with more than 1 million people. But compared with Jiangsu, no city in Shandong has 6 million. Guangdong, the province with the largest economy, ranks third with eight cities of 1 million inhabitants each. Seven of them are in the Pearl River Delta, the largest urban area in the world in both size and population, according to the World Bank. There are currently six megacities with an urban population of more than 10 million, 10 large cities with an urban population between 5 and 10 million, and 14 cities with a population between 3 and 5 million. By the end of 2019, China’s urbanization rate was 60%, the Shanghai Daily reports.
Industrial production in China has returned to pre-Covid-19 levels, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) said. In the first quarter, the utilization rate of industrial capacity in the nation reached 77.2%, the highest for the same period since 2013. Industrial output increased 24.5% on a yearly basis in the first quarter, while profits of industrial enterprises jumped 1.79 times on a yearly basis in January and February. In the first quarter, 40 of the 41 major industrial sectors achieved year-on-year growth.
Central China’s Hubei province, hit hard by the Covid-19 outbreak in early 2020, reported first-quarter GDP growth of 58.3% to CNY987.27 billion. The secondary sector expanded 88.9% year-on-year, while the services sector grew by 45.7%. Primary industry, which didn’t grow at all last year, expanded 24.9% in the first quarter of this year. Hubei’s economy contracted by 39.2% in the first quarter of 2020, mostly due to a 76-day strict lockdown that paralyzed local businesses. Almost every sector except mining, natural gas and oil shrank in the first quarter last year. For all of 2020, Hubei’s economy contracted 5% to CNY4.34 trillion. In the first quarter of 2021, Hubei’s retail sales rose 62.7% to reach CNY478.28 billion, compared with a 44.9% drop in the first quarter of last year.
The Chinese economy as a whole recorded an 18.3% expansion in the first quarter. The economy is expected to grow by roughly 9% for the whole year, well above the official goal of more than 6%, experts said. China’s auto sales reached almost 6.5 million units in the first quarter of 2021, an increase of more than 75% year-on-year, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM).
Pudong to become hub for technology innovation
Category China News Round-up, Weekly
Pudong New Area, the reform and opening-up showpiece in Shanghai, is expected to be a major hub for technology innovation and further opening-up, local officials said. An advanced manufacturing industrial cluster featuring six major industries will lead the future development of Pudong, according to a plan. A complete chipmaking industrial chain, which will be globally competitive, shall be set up in Pudong, with annual output reaching CNY350 billion by 2025. Output of innovative drugs is expected to reach CNY200 billion by 2025 while that of the domestic commercial civil aviation industry will reach CNY50 billion. An industrial cluster led by new energy vehicles (NEVs) will be established in Pudong with annual output reaching CNY150 billion in the next five years. Annual output of smart manufacturing will reach CNY220 billion by 2025, while information service providers in Pudong are expected to attain a total income of CNY600 billion in 2025.
By the end of 2025, Pudong is expected to be home to more than 8,000 high-tech companies, according to the plan. To better nurture entrepreneurship, there will be 200 incubators in Pudong in 2025. A technology investment system will be established, including funds of funds, venture capital firms and banks so that more Pudong-based technology companies can go public. “Major breakthroughs in fundamental research, core technologies, product innovation and initial application of products can be expected in Pudong in the next few years. We will also see more high-end innovation resources, the commercialization of innovation results, a vibrant innovation and entrepreneurship ecosystem, and close integration of technological innovation industries,” said Zhou Zhengyu, Deputy Director of Pudong’s Technology and Economic Committee.
High-level opening-up will be another feature in Pudong’s development over the next five years to help Pudong gain a more competitive edge in the global market. The financial industry will also play a key role. Up to 1,250 financial institutions with banking or securities licenses will operate in Pudong by 2025, accounting for two-thirds of the city’s total. The region will also be home to 150 international asset management firms and 15 leading fintech companies. During the 14th Five Year Plan period (2021-25), Pudong will account for 60% of Shanghai’s total import and export value, the China Daily reports.
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