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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Business/Markets -> 
Mega data project bolsters digital infrastructure
    2022-05-31  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

AS China rides the digitalization wave and seeks to tap into the full potential of the big data industry, a megaproject addressing the soaring demand for computing power is taking shape.

In February, China started work on the project to build an integrated national big data system involving the establishment of eight national computing hubs and 10 national data center clusters.

Dubbed “East data, west computing,” the project is a key part of China’s digital infrastructure. It aims to coordinate the computing capabilities of the country’s eastern regions, where the need for computing is high, with inland western regions, where abundant renewable resources are optimal for the construction of data centers.

Simply put, the project is designed to have less developed inland regions store and process data transmitted from economically advanced eastern areas.

“The construction of the project has taken shape and heralds a promising future,” said Lin Nianxiu, deputy director of the National Development and Reform Commission.

In the next step, China will build and deploy modern infrastructure with a forward-thinking mindset, and accelerate the digital transformation of traditional infrastructure, Lin said.

Industry insiders have high hopes that the project will boost economic growth. By building computing hubs and data centers, the project is expected to boost investment in the upstream and downstream industrial chains.

Statistics show that since the beginning of this year, 25 new projects have been launched in 10 national data center clusters in China, with combined computing power equivalent to approximately 27 million personal computers.

These new projects have attracted a total investment of over 190 billion yuan (US$28.2 billion). Investment in China’s western regions increased sixfold from the same period last year.

As one of the designated computing hubs, Guizhou has decided to upgrade its digital infrastructure and plans to spend about 17 billion yuan on the big data industry this year.

Guizhou will construct a “data corridor” that will link it with the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area and the Chengdu-Chongqing economic circle to better meet the computing needs of the two areas, said Jiao Delu, chief engineer of the Guizhou provincial big data development administration. (Xinhua)

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