Huawei emphasizes digitalization and decarbonization at Cape Town meet
Leo Chen, President of Huawei Sub-Saharan Africa has laid out how two transformative forces, digitalisation and decarbonisation, are driving humanity towards an intelligent world.
Africa, he said, can ride a new wave of "digital-physical convergence”, which marks a new phase
of digitalisation, to leapfrog development in the digital economy era.
He said this while delivering a keynote address for AfricaCom 2023, Africa’s largest tech conference,
currently underway in Cape Town,
To achieve these goals, Chen believes
“Africa's first priority must be to accelerate the development of connectivity
infrastructure.”
“That is because, in the future, more people, things, and
applications will be connected,” he said.
“This process will generate far more
data than it does today. So, we need a more secure, reliable, and developed
network to act as the foundation for digitalisation.”
This infrastructure, he pointed out,
should be more advanced, more future-proof, and more inclusive and accessible.
Achieving the first of these simply means ensuring that African countries have
access to the same leading-edge connectivity technology as the rest of the
world, such as Huawei’s
4G, 5G
and even 5G-Advanced solutions.
To be future-proof, meanwhile,
infrastructure should support future application scenarios, like smart
solutions in vertical industries and smart homes. And while inclusive
connectivity remains a significant challenge on the continent, there is hope on
that front too.
For example, Chen said, “Huawei's cost-effective wireless
RuralStar solution can provide remote areas with broadband coverage, access to
the Internet, and digital services. This bridges the digital gap and enables
inclusive development.”.
According to Chen,
embracing the full capabilities of the cloud is another important facet of
digitalisation for African countries.
“It is important that African
countries establish national cloud data centres to provide computing resources
to the governments, public and SMEs,” he said. “This will drive the innovation
ecosystem.
“By establishing
‘e-Government Clouds’”, he added, “governments can improve operational
efficiency, and provide citizens with one-stop and innovative services.”
Using cloud service is
also a simple and economical way for African countries to obtain AI
capabilities.
For example, as the world’s fastest-growing cloud service
provider, Huawei Cloud is equipped with the Pangu AI model which is, "born
for industry" and can also be used in Africa for agriculture, and disaster
prevention and mitigation, improving the livelihood of African people.
As Chen pointed out, adopting
these kinds of digital technologies will also help drive decarbonisation across
the continent.
In fact, he said, the ICT industry can help reduce global carbon
emissions by 20%, equivalent to 10 times its own emissions, and can also make
digital energy production more efficient.
Among the examples provided by
Chen was its work at Scatec, the largest ground PV plant project in Africa. The
project can provide clean electricity to more than 120 000 households.
Huawei’s solution, he said, improved the plant’s energy yield by over two
percent, and improved O&M efficiency by more than 40%.
“Huawei's solutions can also help carriers to cut their carbon
emissions,” he said. “For example, across more than 10 African countries, we have
built over 6 000 green sites, and helped carriers save US40 million.”
“Moreover, Huawei's Smart PV can
be used for scenarios like industrial and commercial, household, and micro-grid
solar,” he added “Therefore, it can help the African people gain a sustainable,
affordable, and reliable power supply.”
Chen also highlighted the fact that it is ‘people’ that drives all these
innovations. “This is why Huawei has always put digital talent cultivation at
the centre of the digital ecosystem,” he said.
“Over the past five years, Huawei has trained 100 000 digital talents in
Sub-Saharan Africa. Between 2022 and 2025, we will train another 100 000.” He
also said, Huawei believed in localised joint innovation, and are proud of
being supporting the world well-known M-Pesa and Mobile Money innovations in
Africa.
“To accelerate digital Africa is
to create a prosperous and sustainable Africa,” Chen concluded. “To this end,
we are ready to work with all parties to achieve
this great
mission.”
As a key participant and sponsor
at AfricaCom, Huawei presented its latest technologies and solutions in a
350-meter exhibition and supported and organized four forums, including the
African Ministerial Forum for a Future-Oriented Digital Infrastructure, Africa
Fibre Forum 2023, Africa Operations Transformation Forum 2023, and the Africa
5G Summit.
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