China’s smartest city to lead the nation on faster track of digital economy

April 10 in 2018, the photographer visited the hangzhou traffic police urban brain practice base in hangzhou, east China's zhejiang province. (Photo by Xu Kangping from People’s Daily on line)

April 10 in 2018, the photographer visited the hangzhou traffic police urban brain practice base in hangzhou, east China’s zhejiang province. (Photo by Xu Kangping from People’s Daily on line)

“You don’t have to worry about getting abducted. If I were to make a move, if you lose contact with friends and family, the police will find me in no time.” Zhang Daqiang (pseudonym), a taxi driver from Hangzhou, east China’s Zhejiang province, joked to his passengers as his car sped along the elevated highways where camera after camera form a gigantic security net. “Because the smart city brain is there. It is everywhere,” Zhang added. Dubbed the smartest city in China, Hangzhou is the nation’s first to set up a “smart city brain” and is expected to further lead the nation in digitalization.

 

A bigger goal

Zhejiang intends to build a digital scientific innovation center with global impact and become a trade and finance center with emerging new models. The province will also lead the nation with demo districts on digital industry development, Gao Xingfu, the vice-provincial governor of Zhejiang, announced at the West Lake Cybersecurity Conference in Hangzhou on April 20. The added value of the digital economy’s core output value in Zhejiang topped 554.8 billion yuan last year, up 13.1% year on year, which equaled to 9.9 percent of the provincial GDP. The digital economy’s core output and integrated output value combined took up 40% of the total GDP. By 2022, the total added value of the digital economy is expected to climb to over 50 percent, Gao introduced. The smart city brain project was first launched in Hangzhou in 2016, which empowered the city with big data and AI to assist with city traffic and public security work. “It is really helpful,” Zhang said. “There were many more traffic jams in the city before. Now, the smart city brain helps alleviate pressure on the roads with traffic flow diversion.”

 

Thanks to the AI hub set up by Alibaba that offers real-time analysis on traffic lights at 128 intersections and deployment advice for smooth traffic flows, waiting time has dropped by 15.3% in a pilot area that covers more than 9 million residents. On elevated highways, travel time is reduced by 4.6 minutes. It also boasts an accuracy of 92% on traffic accident reports, which greatly helps improve working efficiency for traffic police. On public security, according to Dahua Technology, the company’s safe city project in one district of Hangzhou between 2015 and 2018 has yielded a series of fruitful results, including the increase of case closure rate of property crime, from 5.67% to 72.30%, which has improved police intelligence and practical applications.

 

Cybersecurity at the core

“While smart cities expand their influence across the nation, it is increasingly important to address cybersecurity risks that rise with smart city construction. In addition to smart city brains, we need smart and safe city brains with the help of AI, cloud computing, IoT, big data, and blockchain,” Fan Yuan, chairman of Hangzhou Anheng Information Technology Co. Ltd., told People’s Daily Overseas Social Media on the sideline of the conference. Private enterprises for cybersecurity are at their best time for development in China as the nation is resolute in beefing up its cyber defense power, Fan commented, calling on all counterparts to be more creative and innovative in cybersecurity services.

 

Fan also announced at the conference that the company now boasts a special surveillance camera with an IoT security chip, which is reportedly able to not only safeguard the camera from hacking attacks but also remains aware of the system’s security situation. Dahua Technology, on the other hand, also actively takes technical and protective measures to guarantee data security, including forcing installers to initialize devices with new and complex passwords to reduce the risk of system breaches, an employee at the conference introduced to reporters.

 

(People’s Daily Overseas New Media)

By Jiang Jie

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