logo
China races to turn quantum computing into industrial solutions

China races to turn quantum computing into industrial solutions

Borneo Post5 days ago

Wang Jianwei (C), a professor at Peking University, tests an integrated photonic quantum chip with doctoral students Jia Xinyu (L) and Zhai Chonghao in a laboratory of Peking University in Beijing, capital of China, Feb. 18, 2025. (Xinhua)
HEFEI (June 25): In a significant stride toward practical quantum computing, a Chinese startup has successfully deployed its superconducting quantum processor to improve the accuracy of breast cancer screenings, showcasing the technology's potential to revolutionize medical diagnostics.
The breakthrough came from Origin Quantum, a Hefei-based startup, which harnessed the parallel processing power of its 'Origin Wukong' quantum computer to analyze medical images with unprecedented speed.
This pioneering work is indicative of China's growing capability in translating quantum computing advancement into practical solutions. In an ambitious drive, the nation seeks to foster an industrial ecosystem of the future amid the global quantum computing race.
The Chinese government work report early this year called for the establishment of a growth mechanism for investment in future industries, including quantum technology, bio-manufacturing, embodied intelligence and 6G.
The national policy guideline spurred a swift market response with entities transforming frontier, lab-based research into operational technologies with tangible impact.
By tapping into the unique strengths of quantum technology, Origin Quantum's innovative approach in processing medical imaging data, developed in collaboration with Bengbu Medical University, resulted in a dramatic reduction of misdiagnosis and missed cases.
'The system enhances mammogram screening accuracy on current noisy intermediate-scale quantum computers, enabling high-precision and rapid classification of both healthy images and lesion malignancy,' said Xie Zongyu, a physician from the university's First Affiliated Hospital.
'Our ultimate goal is to establish a quantum intelligent diagnostic system,' Xie added.
REAL-WORLD USES
In March, a team of Chinese scientists unveiled Zuchongzhi 3.0, a 105-qubit superconducting quantum processor prototype with speed gains in the quadrillions over leading supercomputers for one specific task, showcasing capabilities that surpass those of classical supercomputers.
However, lab advances like this remain niche demonstrations with minimal real-world impact. Over the coming five years, global quantum scientists are aiming to pinpoint a handful of practical quantum applications — like quantum chemistry and drug discovery, now largely bolstered by supercomputers and AI algorithms.
A growing number of Chinese tech companies, including Origin Quantum, are gearing up to make their mark in this field.
'Computational chemistry can partly predict interactions between drug molecules and target proteins. But classical computers have difficulty in accurately predicting complex large molecules,' said Guo Guoping, chief scientist of Origin Quantum that launched the molecular docking software QDock.
'In theory, quantum computers can screen potential compounds and simulate complex reactions to break the computational bottleneck in drug discovery,' Guo added.
AceMapAI, a Suzhou-based biotech company, is working with partners including Tencent Quantum Lab to explore the potential of quantum computing in drug molecular dynamics simulation, and drug screening and optimization.
Zhao Xuejiao, deputy director of Anhui Quantum Computing Engineering Research Center, said that the complex computational problems in China's biopharmaceutical industry will provide a broad application scope for quantum computing.
A Shanghai-based startup is also experimenting with applying quantum algorithms to the massive computations in smart cities.
TuringQ introduced this month a quantum-inspired solution for Autonomous Valet Parking (AVP) that significantly reduces parking wait time and enhances efficiency.
AVP is capable of autonomously navigating routes and parking accurately.
The firm's solution has already been deployed in a large commercial parking lot.
The algorithm cuts the average customer search time from 19.8 minutes under traditional manual scheduling to about 5.5 minutes when the parking space vacancy rate is only 5 percent.
The application of quantum algorithms in the financial sector has become a significant area. Beijing Quantum firm QBoson, the Postal Savings Bank of China and China Mobile jointly designed a quantum algorithm-based bank teller scheduling solution.
QBoson's quantum computer conducted a full search of the extremely large solution space and found the global optimum within milliseconds.
'Quantum computing companies design algorithms based on feedback from those with computational bottlenecks before testing them on quantum machines,' said Dou Mengan, vice president of Origin Quantum. 'This model creates a sustainable industrial ecosystem.'
ENTREPRENEURIAL ZEAL
On a road in Hefei, Anhui Province, which is dubbed 'Quantum Avenue,' dozens of quantum tech firms, including Origin Quantum, cluster along this compact stretch. In Shanghai and Beijing, the number of companies investing in this track is also on the rise.
CCID Consulting's research shows that China's quantum computing firms increased from 93 in 2023 to 153 in 2024, a rise of nearly 40 percent.
The country's quantum computing industry scale will keep rising swiftly to 11.56 billion yuan (1.61 billion U.S. dollars) by 2025, maintaining an annual growth rate of over 30 percent, according to CCID Consulting.
In 2023 and 2024, the total R&D expenditure in quantum computing exceeded 100 percent of the total revenue, indicating that companies in the sector have entered a period of active development.
China's quantum engineers are exploring multiple technological routes: Origin Quantum focuses on superconducting, TuringQ and QBoson on photonic quantum computing, and Hyqubit from Beijing on ion traps.
Now, in early development of quantum computing, the front-runners and best technical approaches have not yet been consolidated, meaning 'any country that is able to deploy quantum tech first will have a first-mover advantage,' according to a report published by the Mercator Institute for China Studies last December.
China has built a full industrial chain ecosystem in quantum computing, covering quantum chip design and production, quantum computer manufacturing, quantum algorithm development and industry solutions, said Zhao.
Cutting-edge attempts also include integrating quantum computing with generative AI. In April, Origin Quantum successfully fine-tuned a billion-parameter AI model on its quantum computer Origin Wukong, marking the first real-world application of quantum computing in large-model tasks.
'In the past five years, the surge of generative AI has brought about many disruptive changes in computing models,' said Sun Xiaoming, a researcher at the Institute of Computing Technology under the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
'In the next five years, quantum computing is likely to move from labs to applications, and the integration of AI and quantum computing is expected to become a trend,' added Sun. – Xinhua China computer science industrial technology

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

News Analysis: Extreme heatwaves underscore climate urgency, demand action
News Analysis: Extreme heatwaves underscore climate urgency, demand action

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

News Analysis: Extreme heatwaves underscore climate urgency, demand action

LONDON, June 29 (Xinhua) -- Over the past few weeks, heatwaves have hit several regions of the Northern Hemisphere, including parts of North America, Europe, and eastern Asia. As the Northern Hemisphere endures a summer of unprecedented heat, experts warn that these extreme events are not isolated anomalies, but stark evidence of accelerating climate change. From Europe to North America and Asia, the impacts are straining societies, economies, and ecosystems, prompting urgent calls for both immediate adaptation and long-term mitigation. DRIVERS OF EXTREME WARMTH "These are separate events, not a single heatwave event sweeping across the Northern Hemisphere," said Julien Nicolas, senior scientist at the Copernicus Climate Change Service. "Affected regions are often separated by areas with colder-than-average conditions." Despite their geographic separation, these events share a common underlying cause -- human-induced climate change. Scientists have widely agreed that the persistent rise in greenhouse gas emissions since the Industrial Revolution is the primary driver of this year's intense heatwaves. The still-unbroken trend of rising temperatures due to anthropogenic greenhouse gases has led to record-high sea surface temperatures, further warming the lower atmosphere, Andreas Walter, spokesperson for the German Meteorological Service, has told Xinhua. Heatwaves are often triggered and sustained by stationary high-pressure systems, sometimes referred to as "heat domes." These systems trap hot air near the surface and block the formation of cooling clouds and precipitation, leading to prolonged periods of extreme heat, Nicolas explained. In the United Kingdom, a persistent high-pressure zone has led to parched soils and rising surface temperatures, intensifying the heatwave's impact. Another contributing factor is the transition from El Nino to La Nina, which can weaken the West African monsoon and shift hot tropical air northward into Europe. This process supports the persistence of high-pressure systems and prolongs heat and drought conditions. In the United States, heatwaves are the deadliest form of extreme weather. The current wave is particularly concerning, as it marks the first of the season yet brings temperatures more typical of midsummer, not June. Affecting around 150 million people from Wisconsin to Washington D.C., this event bears all the hallmarks of human-induced climate change. Simultaneously, Europe is experiencing similarly searing temperatures, also intensified by global warming. In Slovenia, average temperatures there have risen by about two degrees Celsius since 1961, doubling the global average and making heatwaves both more frequent and more severe. Aemet, Spain's national weather agency, has issued a special warning, forecasting highs of up to 42 degrees Celsius in the country's southern regions in the coming days. In neighbouring Portugal, around two-thirds of the country will be placed under high alert on Sunday due to extreme temperatures and the risk of wildfires. Lisbon could see highs of 42 degrees Celsius. In Italy, where cities such as Naples and Palermo are bracing for 39 degrees Celsius heat, the regions of Sicily and Liguria have introduced bans on outdoor work during the hottest parts of the day. According to the World Meteorological Organization, Asia is warming at nearly twice the global average. This rapid warming has fueled a series of record-breaking and unusually early heatwaves in 2025. Earlier this month, India's capital, New Delhi-home to over 30 million people, is facing a historic heatwave, prompting the India Meteorological Department to issue a red alert. Temperatures in several areas are soaring 41-45 degrees Celsius, surpassing long-term averages by three to four degrees. Meanwhile, in Pakistan's Punjab region, temperatures have reached 50 degrees Celsius, a level considered "close to the survival threshold." WIDESPREAD CONSEQUENCES "Through its influence on extreme heat, human-induced climate change puts a massive burden on societies, leading to thousands of premature deaths and severe strain on infrastructure and ecosystems," said Fredi Otto, lead scientist at the World Weather Attribution project. "It also causes significant agricultural losses and reductions in productivity." Moreover, their impact on public health and vital sectors continues to escalate. According to a real-time analysis in 2025 by the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and Imperial College London, an estimated 570 people in England and Wales may have died due to high temperatures between June 19 and June 22. Health authorities have issued warnings as temperatures near 39 degrees Celsius in countries such as Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia, with some regions experiencing their driest June on record. Hospitals are reporting rising cases of heatstroke, dehydration, and cardiovascular issues. Public officials are urging residents to stay hydrated, limit outdoor activities, and care for vulnerable neighbors. The agricultural sector is also under acute stress. In many parts o Europe, prolonged drought and extreme heat have left soils dangerously dry, threatening major crops such as corn and sunflower and reducing grain yields, including barley. Forests are also vulnerable to wildfires and pest outbreaks, exacerbated by warmer winters. HungaroMet's June 2025 agrometeorological report highlights extreme drought across large areas of Hungary. In central and southeastern regions of the country, rainfall since March has been 40-100 mm below average. Topsoil moisture is below 20 percent in most areas, with corn and sunflower leaves curling, and even early-harvested barley is suffering. Infrastructure systems are also being tested. Roads and railways are buckling under heat stress, power grids face surging electricity demand, and many regions are grappling with water shortages. The economic toll is growing. The World Bank warns that, if current trends continue, extreme heat could reduce annual GDP in European and Central Asian cities by up to 2.5 percent by 2050. URGENT MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION MEASURES NEEDED Governments and communities are intensifying efforts to protect public health and adapt to a rapidly warming climate. In the UK, amber weather alerts have been issued alongside widespread public messaging on heat safety. Local councils are proactively checking on vulnerable residents and opening cooling centers. Across Europe, similar measures are underway, Slovenia has activated emergency protocols, extended pool hours, and disseminated health guidance through multiple channels. Experts stress that while short-term responses are crucial, long-term adaptation is even more essential. "Cities, in particular, must implement measures to mitigate the impact of heatwaves, such as increasing urban greenery and providing shaded areas," said Andreas Walter. Urban greening, reflective surfaces, and climate-conscious architecture are increasingly promoted as key strategies to combat the urban heat island effect. At the policy level, some countries are making progress. Slovenia, for example, is incorporating climate adaptation into national planning, with a focus on infrastructure, water resource management, and disaster risk reduction. Still, experts caution that adaptation alone is not enough. "Reducing greenhouse gas emissions remains essential to limit the worsening extremes of weather for future generations, but there is also an urgent need to improve our preparedness for more severe hot, dry but also wet weather extremes as the climate continues to warm," said Richard Allan.

Cambodia boosts digital cultural industry with China
Cambodia boosts digital cultural industry with China

The Star

time2 hours ago

  • The Star

Cambodia boosts digital cultural industry with China

PHNOM PENH, June 29 (Xinhua) -- The 2025 Hi View platform and the first Cambodian AI short drama were launched here on Sunday, aiming to promote the innovative application of AI-Generated Content (AIGC) technology in Cambodia's digital cultural industry. The event was co-organized by China's Guangxi Yaoxiang Cultural Communication Co., Ltd. and Cambodia's BKL Media Production Company. Pok Borak, director of the Department of Cinema and Cultural Promotion of Cambodia's Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts, said cooperation between Cambodian and Chinese firms would help boost the development of the digital cultural industry in the Southeast Asian country. The ministry fully supports the development of the Hi View platform and looks forward to Chinese partners building bases and cultivating AIGC digital cultural talents in Cambodia, he said. Thien Narom, general manager of BKL Media Production Company, said the Chinese firm-backed AIGC technology will drive the creation of new films and television content formats at an even faster pace. "Through the AIGC technology, stories will be converted into AI short dramas or short videos efficiently and easily to attract a wider audience," she said. "We must seize this opportunity to promote Cambodia's beautiful culture to China and the world." Wang Jie, general manager of the Chinese company, said the Hi View has thousands of short play contents, which are available for viewing online, adding that the first Cambodian AI short drama was entirely produced by using AIGC technology. Wang said that at the Hi View platform, film lovers can watch short plays at any time on diversified subjects such as love, comedy, life, science, fiction, travel, and culture, among others in different languages.

UN agency pushes AI ethics standards as US-China tech rivalry deepens
UN agency pushes AI ethics standards as US-China tech rivalry deepens

The Star

time5 hours ago

  • The Star

UN agency pushes AI ethics standards as US-China tech rivalry deepens

A United Nations agency is rallying policymakers, non-government organisations and academics to support its ethics guidelines on artificial intelligence (AI) at a time when the technology is rapidly changing the world. Unesco, the 194-member UN heritage agency that produced the world's first – and so far only – global AI ethics standards four years ago, hosted a forum in Bangkok this week to drive the adoption of its recommendations. However, there is a long way to go before the recommendations could be turned into a universal, actionable framework amid an intensifying AI race between the US and China, according to analysts. At the opening on Wednesday of the third Unesco Global Forum on the Ethics of AI, Unesco director general Audrey Azoulay called for collaboration among governments, businesses and civil society to come up with an international solution. 'That is what Unesco is working to provide – preparing the world for AI and preparing AI for the world, ensuring it serves the common good,' she said. The message comes as hopes are dimming for a global consensus on AI ethics. A bipartisan group of US lawmakers introduced a bill in both chambers of Congress to ban the federal use of China-linked AI tools such as DeepSeek, in the latest sign of hostility in the tech rivalry between the world's two largest economies. Meanwhile, the world's largest AI companies, from US-based OpenAI and Google to China's DeepSeek, were absent from the forum, which attracted more than 1,000 participants and 35 government ministers, mainly from Asia-Pacific, Africa and Latin America. When asked how other countries would respond to the divisions in the AI world, Wisit Wisitsora-At, Permanent Secretary at the Thai Ministry of Digital Economy and Society, said Thailand would not take sides in the US-China competition, adding that it would try to develop its own AI ecosystem. Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra, who is facing political pressure at home over a leaked phone call with Cambodian strongman Hun Sen, delivered a speech in English, listing her country's AI development goals, including 90,000 AI professionals and over US$15 billion in spending for AI infrastructure. With the noticeable absence of American and Chinese government delegations at the three-day event – even though the US rejoined the group in 2023 after its withdrawal during the first Trump administration – the forum provided a stage for policymakers from the Asean region and 'global south' countries, from Malaysia and Indonesia to Zambia and Zimbabwe, to voice their ambitions, concerns and priorities in coping with AI. Irakli Khodeli, the head of ethics at Unesco's AI unit, said in an interview on Thursday that different countries had their own priorities for now, with some highlighting 'security' while others were aiming for 'access to AI'. A key aim of the gathering was to discuss the 'readiness assessment methodology', a tool to turn the UN body's AI ethics recommendations into policy actions. The assessment includes a questionnaire for governments, asking questions such as, 'Is there a specific consideration for the impact of AI on land and water use?'. More than 70 countries have taken part in the methodology. 'It is not a talk shop, it is a workshop for members to exchange notes,' Khodeli said of the event. At the gathering, some participants publicly outlined the challenges faced in applying ethics guardrails to AI development. Rachel Adams, founding CEO of the Global Centre on AI Governance, a non-profit organisation in South Africa, and author of The New Empire of AI: The Future of Global Inequality , said many civil society groups were having funding problems since US President Donald Trump shut down the United States Agency for International Development. During a panel discussion at the event, Zeng Yi, dean of the Beijing Institute of AI Safety and Governance and a professor with the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said it was not difficult for countries to agree on terminologies such as transparency, but it was much harder to translate them into actual measures on the ground. Unesco sponsored the South China Morning Post's trip to the Bangkok event. - SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store