Big expectations from big data

Guizhou takes advantage of new technology to develop economy, boost employment and combat poverty
Guizhou in Southwest China struggled with unemployment and poverty before big data created a big future for the province.
Nestled in a mountainous region, it has been transformed in the past three years into an innovation hub as major global companies, such as Apple Inc, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Hyundai Motor Group, flocked to the area.
"Big data has helped relieve local poverty as it has brought huge opportunities to impoverished areas and created jobs at the same time," says Jing Yaping, deputy director of the bureau responsible for Guizhou province's big data development.
A "time tunnel" effect is displayed at Guizhou province's big data demonstration center in Guiyang. Photos by Xinhua / For China Daily |
The China International Big Data Industry Expo 2017 in Guiyang attracted more than 310 enterprises and institutions. |
Innovation and cutting-edge technology have fueled economic growth across China, with big data playing a crucial role.
This transformation is in line with General Secretary Xi Jinping's remarks during the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China.
Xi emphasized that innovation is the primary force driving development.
"We will move Chinese industries up to the medium-high end of the global value chain and foster a number of world-class advanced manufacturing clusters," he said.
Xi also called for more efforts to develop advanced manufacturing and promote further integration of the internet, big data and artificial intelligence with the real economy.
Guizhou has adopted this approach to achieve rapid growth.
Official data showed the industrial output of large-scale digital information manufacturing in the province was at 5.26 billion yuan ($794 million; 675 million euros; £600 million) in the first half of this year, a jump of 64 percent compared with 2016.
It was first time the sector had contributed double-digit numbers to industrial growth.
"In Guizhou, big data has become the new growth engine for economic transformation," says Qin Rupei, executive vice-governor of Guizhou and a delegate at the congress.
Figures also show that software and IT services produced revenue of 15.59 billion yuan in the first half of the year, a 36.4 percent increase year-on-year.
"Thanks to big data, Guizhou has been able to rejuvenate itself," says Jing, deputy director of the big data bureau.
An hour's drive out of the provincial capital of Guiyang is the Guian New Area, a 1,795-square-kilometer industrial technology park packed with blue-chip brands.
Hyundai is one of the latest big names to open a big data center there. The South Korea-based automotive company plans to collate and analyze massive data for its advanced automated vehicles. It will also use the information for research and development.
"Hyundai Motor's know-how in big data analysis, coupled with Guizhou province's push into (the sector), will surely accelerate development in connected car technologies," Hwang Seung-ho, executive vice-president and head of the auto intelligence division at Hyundai, says on the company's website.
Earlier this year, China Daily reported that more than 400 companies in the big data industry had set up in the Guian New Area, including Apple, Microsoft, Alibaba, Tencent Holdings and Huawei Technologies.
China's major telecom operators, China Telecommunications Corp, China Mobile Communications Corp and China United Network Communications Group, also have centers there.
Up to 20 Fortune 500 companies and 14 of China's top 500 companies have a presence in the technology park.
Apple, for example, invested $1 billion on its first big data center in the country. The Guian setup will be used to help meet growing demand for advanced cloud services.
The global tech giant's decision to ramp up investment in China comes at a time when it is losing ground to domestic rivals such as Huawei.
Still, this move will cement its place in the market here.
Another high-profile business in Guizhou is FAST, or the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope. The installation recently celebrated its first anniversary there.
Known as the world's largest radio telescope, it is able to collect celestial big data by detecting emissions from stars and galaxies across the cosmos.
FAST has also been used to study pulsars, or pulsating radio stars.
"New discoveries, such as pulsars, have been made by FAST, which is of great importance to solving key physics problems," the National Astronomical Observatories of China said in a media conference.
Back on Earth, leading cloud service provider Baishan Cloud has increased its sales volume more than 50-fold since opening in Guizhou in 2015, although the private company declined to disclose further financial information.
Companies such as Baishan Cloud have helped create jobs and fuel the province's economy.
Last year, e-commerce turnover in the province's rural areas increased by 27.1 percent and helped the added-value side of the agricultural processing industry.
Statistics from the Guizhou Poverty Alleviation Office also showed that poverty rates dropped from 26.8 percent in 2012 to 10.6 by the end of last year. Additionally, up to 1,500 villages have been removed from the poverty-stricken list.
"We have made significant progress in fighting poverty in the past few years through industry development," says Qin Rufang, deputy director of the province's Poverty Relief Office.
Contact the writers at chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn and yangjun@chinadaily.com.cn
Dong Xianwu contributed to this story.
(China Daily Africa Weekly 10/27/2017 page28)
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