China's Yangtze River Delta Hub Computing Power Platform Starts Interconnection and Interoperability

TapTechNews August 27th news, according to the news from the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology today, on August 23rd, the work of interconnection and interoperability of the Yangtze River Delta hub computing power platform was officially launched in Wujiang District, Suzhou City, Jiangsu Province.

The Administrative Committee of the Yangtze River Delta Eco-Green Integrated Development Demonstration Zone, the Shanghai Municipal Communications Administration, relevant government units such as Qingpu, Wujiang, and Jiashan districts and counties, the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology, the Shanghai Internet Exchange Center of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the Developer Alliance of the Demonstration Zone, the Financial Integration Alliance of the Demonstration Zone, as well as the National (Shanghai) New Internet Exchange Center, Suzhou Computing Power Technology Co., Ltd., Wuhu Big Data Construction Investment and Operation Co., Ltd., Alibaba Cloud Intelligence Group and other units participated in the launch work.

According to the introduction, the Yangtze River Delta computing power hub is one of the eight computing power hubs planned in China's 'East Data West Computing' project, and two big data center clusters in the Yangtze River Delta Integrated Demonstration Zone and Wuhu have been planned and established, which will undertake the real-time computing power demand of the central cities in the Yangtze River Delta.

The start of the interconnection and interoperability of the '1+4' computing power platforms in the Yangtze River Delta hub indicates that a development pattern of 'integrated coordination, radiating the whole region, east-west interaction, and two-way assistance' will be constructed between the demonstration zone cluster and the Wuhu cluster, among which:

'1' means the Yangtze River Delta (Shanghai) computing power interconnection and interoperability platform. The Yangtze River Delta (Shanghai) computing power interconnection and interoperability platform is a computing power Internet carrier under the guidance of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, uniformly deployed by the Shanghai Municipal Communications Administration, constructed and operated by the Shanghai Internet Exchange Center of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, and the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology provides a computing power interconnection solution. This platform has both supervision and management capabilities and industrial service capabilities, and is connected upward to the national computing power Internet public service platform.

'4' means the Shanghai computing power trading platform, the Suzhou public computing power service platform, the Alibaba Cloud Yangtze River Delta Intelligent Computing (Jiashan) computing power base, and the Yangtze River Delta hub Wuhu cluster computing power public service platform. In the future, by connecting the four regional computing power platforms to the Yangtze River Delta (Shanghai) computing power interconnection and interoperability platform, following the plan steps of 'first interconnection, then networking, and building a large computing power market', a computing power integration pattern of 'cross-region, cross-entity, and cross-architecture' in the Yangtze River Delta region will be formed to realize the interconnection and interoperability of computing power resources and the efficient matching of computing power supply and demand, and the intelligent scheduling of application data.

The 'East Data West Computing' project refers to building a new type of computing power network system integrating data centers, cloud computing, and big data, guiding the computing power demand in the east to the west in an orderly manner, optimizing the construction layout of data centers, and promoting the coordinated interaction betw een the east and the west.

According to TapTechNews' previous report, in February 2022, China started the construction of national computing power hub nodes in eight places such as the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, the Yangtze River Delta, the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, the Chengdu-Chongqing region, Inner Mongolia, Guizhou, Gansu, and Ningxia, and planned 10 national data center clusters, starting the 'East Data West Computing' project.

China plans that by the end of 2025, all kinds of new computing power in the national hub node areas will account for more than 60% of the new computing power in the country, and the green electricity of the new data centers in the national hub node will account for more than 80%.

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