#UK £25m UK-China innovation hothouse launched in Cambridge

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Stephen Toope Cambridge University BT Huawei

A unique £25 million innovation hothouse has been created in Cambridge by Chinese ICT star Huawei in collaboration with BT and the university.

In a hard-wired five-year collaboration the research nexus will focus on projects relating to photonics, digital and access network infrastructure and media technologies, alongside work aimed at enhancing the societal impact of communications technologies.

The project will bring together experts from the BT Labs, the Huawei R & D team at Cambridge Science Park and academics from the University of Cambridge to explore novel technologies that have the potential to unlock economic benefits for UK businesses and organisations – such as reducing the cost of network infrastructure and boosting operational performance. 

Work will also focus on the critical role that new technologies can play in delivering positive impacts for society – for example reducing inequality – particularly for groups excluded from digital transformation. The venture will address using ICT technologies to improve resilience of communities to climate change.

The funding is also geared to support longer-term, ‘blue skies’ research projects being progressed by postgraduate students at the university which are focused on generating benefits for industry and society at large. 

All these projects will be assessed by an Academic Advisory Board intended to comprise senior representatives from each of the parties. The university maintains strong links with the hi-tech business cluster of more than 4,700 companies which has sprung up around the Cambridge area. 

The new research and collaboration team – expected to be based at the university’s Maxwell Centre – will further harness the combined strengths of industry and the very best in academia to strengthen the area’s position as one of the leading technology hubs in Europe.

The new group is expected to start operation in the first half of 2018 with five to 10 researchers from BT and Huawei working alongside university collaborators.

Prof Stephen Toope, vice-chancellor at the University of Cambridge, said: “The world of telecommunications has advanced rapidly over the last two decades. However, there is still work to be done to improve the technologies we use on a daily basis and to ensure that they are long-lived. By working with BT and Huawei we will be able to demonstrate that the insights delivered through our research have a broad impact.”

BT group chief executive Gavin Patterson said the company currently invested around £500 million every year in R & D and over the last decade had been the third biggest contributor to UK R & D. 

He said: “BT’s fixed and mobile infrastructure is the engine of the UK economy so it is essential that we continue to innovate in this space to enhance the UK’s competitiveness on the world stage towards and through Brexit.

“We believe the best way of ensuring this country remains at the forefront of innovation is by combining the expertise and commercial focus of industry with the fantastic intellectual capital found at our world-leading universities. 

“Working together with Huawei and the University of Cambridge, we will discover the next generation of technologies which promise to deliver huge economic, social and cultural benefits for UK citizens.”

Ken Hu, deputy chairman and rotating CEO for Huawei, added:“Technology is changing the world faster than we have ever seen. It will bring many benefits to mankind and affect nearly every aspect of our lives. 

“Huawei will continue to invest and form partnerships to build out future infrastructure. We have over 80,000 people in research and development globally, working with customers, universities and industry bodies.

“No single organisation has all the answers. Partnership is the only way forward in a complex digital age. We look forward to working with BT and the University of Cambridge. Together, we will explore future technologies and help ensure a positive social impact.”

BT and Huawei have a long history of working with Cambridge on research projects. Researchers at the BT Labs in Adastral Park at Martlesham near Ipswich recently collaborated with the university’s Cavendish Lab on a project to assess the potential theoretical speeds that can be delivered over the UK’s access network infrastructure. Huawei and the university have been working together for seven years on range of successful research projects including media, communications and other technologies.

• Pictured above (left to right): BT CEO, Gavin Patterson, University of Cambridge Vice-Chancellor, Prof Stephen Toope and Huawei CEO, Ken Hu

from Business Weekly http://ift.tt/2zYEVgX

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