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My Take | How China’s automated super factories are raising hopes for an economic revival

  • A tour of Android handset maker Honor’s smart factory in Shenzhen showed how far Chinese manufacturing has progressed

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The environment inside a highly automated plant appears a far cry from the days when mainland Chinese factories were known as “labour-intensive” sweatshops. Photo: Shutterstock
Last Friday, I attended an organised tour of a relatively new smartphone factory in southern tech hub Shenzhen, as well as its research and development lab. What I saw there represents how far Chinese manufacturing has progressed.
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This hi-tech factory commenced operations just three years ago as the global manufacturing centre of owner Honor, an Android smartphone brand spun off from Huawei Technologies in November 2020. Honor touts two major indicators at this factory: its automation ratio and the ratio of local equipment.

The plant’s automation ratio, or the percentage of work that can be done by machines instead of humans, is now at 85 per cent from about 70 per cent when it started handset production three years ago. For example, only 22 workers man a single 150-metre-long assembly line, which starts from raw main boards to finished products in boxes for delivery, because of the high degree of automated production via robotic arms and laser machines.

All the workers, who are probably in their early 20s, wear uniforms and special shoes on the clean and orderly factory floor. The environment appears a far cry from the days when mainland Chinese factories were known as “labour-intensive” sweatshops.

Honor’s hi-tech factory in Shenzhen features an automation ratio of 85 per cent. Photo: Honor
Honor’s hi-tech factory in Shenzhen features an automation ratio of 85 per cent. Photo: Honor
The plant’s ratio of local equipment, or percentage of Chinese-developed machines used in production, currently stands at about 60 per cent owing to the continued deployment of imported tools from Germany and Japan. Still, Honor’s in-house-developed equipment dominates the factory floor, with each machine sporting a special logo.
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