MDDI 演讲稿 · 2025-11-26
陈杰豪高级政务部长在欧洲商会 AI 峰会 2025 上的开幕致辞
Opening Address by SMS Tan Kiat How At EuroCham AI Summit 2025
要点
- • 「炒作 vs 泡沫」(buzz vs bubble)情绪 6–12 个月内剧烈摇摆——但 AI 作为通用目的技术(GPT)会留下来;问题是怎么用。
- • 新加坡企业 AI 采用率从 2024 年约 50% 升至 2025 年约 70%;微软 AI Diffusion Report 显示新加坡 58.6% 的工作年龄成年人在工作和生活中使用 AI。
- • 政府已与 50+ 公司合作建立 AI 卓越中心(DBS 客服助理、保诚 AI 实验室——24 个亚非市场员工提交超 100 个用例);推出 1.5 亿新元的「企业算力倡议」(Enterprise Compute Initiative),与 AWS / Google Cloud / 微软合作提供云额度。
- • 信任与护栏:AI Verify Foundation 已有 200+ 企业成员;2025 年 2 月推出「全球 AI 保障试点」(Global AI Assurance Pilot),后续是「Global AI Assurance Sandbox」让部署方接受专业技术测试。
- • Tan Kiat How 同时戴着卫生部高级政务部长的帽子——AI 在医院落地需要类似的保障与治理来同时让医生与病人安心。
完整译文(中文)
MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期:2026-05-02
欧盟驻新加坡代表团大使 Artis Bertulis 阁下,
新加坡欧洲商会副会长 Godelieve van Dooren 女士,
各位朋友与嘉宾,
各位女士、先生:
早安。我很高兴出席「欧洲商会 AI 峰会」——围绕一个非常重要的话题。
我们正处在 AI 旅程中一个非常重要的节点。早些时候提到 2024 年欧洲商会发布的《AI 报告:超越炒作》。如今常被问到的问题是——「我们是不是处在泡沫里?」
从「炒作」(buzz)到「泡沫」(bubble),情绪与质询在短短 6 到 9、12 个月里就能剧烈摇摆。但抛开投资者对单家公司估值的看法——我相信这项技术本身会留下来——它是一项变革性技术,能为公司与行业创造大量价值。
和所有通用目的技术一样,我们要问的是「如何采用、如何借力」。新加坡向来把 AI 视为通用目的技术——我们押注于如何充分利用它,建立有活力的生态、支持创新、提升生产力与效率,从而为人民创造机会。
这与我们看待互联网、企业软件、社交媒体的方式没有不同——如何用它做更好的数字营销、新的商业模式。AI 会是一项变革性技术。但我们也常说——技术生命周期里,我们高估它的短期影响、低估它的长期影响。所以一切取决于我们如何使用它、如何在它周围建立生态,让公司与人能充分利用。
自 2024 年欧洲商会《超越炒作》报告以来——AI 在新加坡的采用呈现明显加速。我所在部门近期一项研究显示,新加坡企业 AI 采用率显著上升——受访公司中,从 2024 年的约 5/10 上升到 2025 年的约 7/10。微软上月发布的《AI 扩散报告》显示,新加坡是 AI 采用最高的国家之一——58.6% 的工作年龄成年人将 AI 用于工作与日常生活。
欧洲商会报告的发现是——许多公司在「探索」AI,但大多还停留在「早期实验」与「评估对自身业务模式、工作流与竞争优势的影响」这一阶段。今天我们看到的,已经超越了 AI 实验的早期。
业务领导者在问硬问题——「我们如何更有效、更有意义地部署 AI,做出真实的业务影响?」也就是——「这项技术的投资回报率(ROI)是什么?」可以是劳动生产率提升、给客户更好的产品与服务,或者相对竞争对手取得优势。
我把这视为积极的趋势——质问自己「采用一项技术的真正价值在哪里」。归根结底,我们不是「为采用而采用」——我们采用是为了「把事情做得更好」或「做更好的事情」。要做到这一点——必须做转型的硬功夫——这要求我们对劳动力进行升级或转岗、让员工更好地使用技术,也要让更多公司以更清醒、更冷静的方式思考技术。我们如何支持企业去做这件事?
关键是理解技术——它能做什么、它的边界在哪里。正如 Artis Bertulis 大使前面提到——什么不该做、什么应当留在「人类技能与判断」的领域里。我们正在支持公司在新加坡建立各自专属的 AI 卓越中心。自 2024 年起,政府已与 50 多家公司合作,建立其内部 AI 能力,并开发针对自身业务需求的 AI 方案。
这些公司在采用更精细的 AI 应用。比如星展银行(DBS)开发了「客服官(CSO)助理」,帮客服更高效地回应咨询——这个由生成式 AI 驱动的助理可实时转写对话、检索相关信息并辅助记录。整体上缩短了通话处理时间、提高了信息准确性,从而改善了 DBS 客户的整体服务体验。这只是一个例子——公司正把技术整合进劳动力、支持员工的工作。
这样的进展只有在「公司愿意投入 AI、即便结果不确定也愿意实验、并把这项技术整合到既有劳动力与流程」时才可能。今天在场的许多公司——你们正走在这种大胆实验与业务转型的最前线。
保诚(Prudential)是另一个例子。去年他们在新加坡启用「保诚 AI 实验室」,目标是加速 AI、生成式 AI 与机器学习在整个组织中的采用——以最大化运营效率、并交付更好的客户体验。启动时——来自保诚在亚洲与非洲 24 个市场的员工提交了超过 100 个用例。
对于正在考虑跨出这一步的公司——请联系我们。我们乐于与你们合作建立 AI 卓越中心、支持你们在这个空间的创新实验。通过支持走在创新前沿的公司——我们要建立起 AI 生态繁荣所需的技能、人才与基础设施。
为支持这一倡议——我们启动了「企业算力倡议」(Enterprise Compute Initiative),划拨高达 1.5 亿新元——通过与 AWS、Google Cloud、微软等云服务商的合作,让企业(包括中小企业)获得云额度、AI 工具与咨询服务。这一倡议给我们的企业以支持,把 AI 的雄心转为行动。
我们也认识到——数字转型不只是「技术使用」,根本上是关于「人」。这正是为什么劳动力升级与再培训始终是新加坡做法的核心。我们启动了「TechSkills Accelerator」(TeSA)与「SkillsFuture」等举措,为工人提供培训课程,让他们在快速演变的 AI 空间里保持「AI 相关」与「AI 流利」。
我们期待与各位这样的公司合作,让我们一起超越「只是实验技术」。通过卓越中心与其他举措——我们想支持 AI 创新;但更重要的是——我们想与你们一起,让你们的员工在数字经济与 AI 加持服务的新时代成为「AI 流利、AI 胜任」。
光靠政府的努力还不够。我们必须协作——与产业、组织紧密合作——当然包括欧洲商会这样的重要伙伴。通过定期对话与今天这样的合作举措——我们把志同道合的伙伴聚在一起。公司、个人、价值链上的不同部分一起思考——作为一个生态我们能一起做什么。
我们想继续推进这场对话。未来合作的一个重要面向,超越「创新、采用、技术、劳动力发展、再培训、转型」——是「信任」。我们必须把支持 AI 健康成长、使用与采用的治理框架就位。
我们与伙伴在这条战线上做了不少工作——是把「护栏」放就位。AI 投资与发展之快——数千亿美元正流入 AI 生态的各部分——从前沿模型,到基础设施,到数据中心。巨量资本流向 AI;前沿模型在快速进步、越来越强大、越来越聪明。但与此同时——当我们一路狂奔在 AI 创新的道路上时——所有关心治理与信任的人,必须思考要在哪里设置护栏。
这就像在山路下行——拐弯前我们就知道会有急弯——所以要把护栏先就位,万一发生什么我们也不会跌下悬崖。要有护栏与减速带,照顾任何技术的下行面——不论是社会层面的负面后果、确保我们作为一群人保持团结而非被技术撕裂、还是确保没有人被甩下。
如何把这些护栏与信任放就位?我们与志同道合的伙伴一起在做这件事。一个例子是「AI Verify 基金会」(AI Verify Foundation)——一个为「负责任 AI」管理开源工作、发展 AI 测试与保障社区的社群。至今已有 200 多家企业会员。
今年 2 月,AI Verify 基金会与 IMDA 启动了「全球 AI 保障试点」(Global AI Assurance Pilot),借助社群的专长,分享产业在 AI 测试中所遇挑战的关键洞察、并就最佳实践达成共识。后续的「全球 AI 保障沙盒」(Global AI Assurance Sandbox)延续了这一成功——让部署方把生成式 AI 应用交给专业技术测试者来测试。
我也戴着另一顶帽子——卫生部高级政务部长。我们也在思考如何用技术——尤其是 AI——支持医生、临床人员与医疗专业人士为新加坡人提供更好的医疗服务。AI 在其中扮演显眼角色。如何确保我们在医院与医疗场景中部署 AI?这就要给医疗专业人士与病人保证——已经有保障与治理就位。AI Verify 基金会开发的指南与测试工具发挥着重要作用。
在人才方面——我们与产业伙伴通过 TeSA 等多项计划紧密合作,为应届生到中职转型者提供「在岗培训」机会。让他们能在真实项目与问题上工作,培养与市场需求相关、可应用的技能。
为推动我们生态中的 AI 精细化——我们也与研究机构紧密合作,做 AI 的前沿研究,包括基础 AI、应用 AI、AI for Science。今年 4 月,A*STAR 与苏黎世联邦理工学院(ETH Zurich)签署谅解备忘录——深化在「AI 应用于药物发现与生命科学」领域的研究合作。这项合作承诺探索 AI 如何加速并降低药物发现的风险——让面向病人的疗法更快、更精准、更经济。
我们相信——若想发展一个有活力的生态,它必须是开放、协作的——与企业、高等教育机构、研究机构的伙伴关系一起把生态搭起来。
所以——这是给在场所有公司的邀请——我期待与各位合作、共建这个 AI 生态。我也期待欧洲商会今后组织的更多对话与平台,把志同道合的公司聚到一起讨论如何把这种伙伴关系往前推。
年关将至——我祝庆祝节日的朋友们圣诞快乐——祝大家有一个安宁、安静的年终假期,并期待 2026 年与各位朋友再聚。
非常感谢。
英文原文
MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期:2026-05-02
His Excellency, Artis Bertulis, Ambassador, European Union Delegation to Singapore
Ms Godelieve van Dooren, Vice-President, EuroCham Singapore
Fellow friends and distinguished guests,
Ladies and gentlemen,
A very good morning to all of you. It's my pleasure to be here with all of you at the EuroCham AI summit to talk about a very important topic.
We are at a very important juncture of our AI journey. Earlier, we mentioned the launch of EuroCham Beyond the Buzz AI Report in 2024. Now the very often-asked question is, are we in a bubble?
From buzz to bubble, it is a very fast swing in sentiments and questions in the course of just six to nine to 12 months. Well, going beyond the views of investors on specific valuation of companies, I believe that the technology itself is here to stay because it is a transformative technology that can potentially create a lot of value for companies and industries.
Like all general-purpose technologies, we ask how we can adopt and leverage it? Singapore has always looked at technologies like AI as a general-purpose technology. We are making bets on how we can make full use of this technology to build a vibrant ecosystem, support companies in innovation, improve productivity and efficiency, thereby creating opportunities for our people.
This is no different from how we think about the internet, enterprise software, or social media – how to use them for better digital marketing and new business models. AI will be a transformative technology. But we often say that in a technology life cycle, we overestimate its short-term impact and underestimate its long-term impact. So, a lot of it depends on how we use it and create an ecosystem around it for companies and people to make full use of it.
Since the launch of EuroCham Beyond the Buzz AI Report in 2024, we've seen remarkable acceleration in AI adoption across Singapore. In a recent study conducted by my ministry, we have observed an increase in AI adoption among enterprises in Singapore. Among the companies surveyed, AI adoption rose from about five in 10 in 2024 to seven in 10 in 2025. In Microsoft’s AI Diffusion Report released last month, Singapore stands as one of the top countries in AI adoption, reporting 58.6% of working-age adults using AI for work and in their daily lives.
The EuroCham report’s findings showed that while many companies were exploring AI, most were still in the early experimental phase and assessing AI's impact on their business models, workflows and their competitive advantage. What we’re seeing today goes beyond early days of AI experimentation.
Business leaders are asking themselves the hard question, “How can we deploy AI more effectively and meaningfully to derive real business impact?” Or in short, “What are my returns on investment for this technology?” This can be labour productivity and gains, better products and services for customers, or getting a competitive advantage compared to their competitors.
I see this as a positive trend, to question ourselves the real value of adopting technology. Because at the end of the day, we don't adopt technology for its own sake. We adopt technology to do something better or do better things. To do something better or do better things requires the hard work of making the transformation. This requires upskilling or reskilling our workforce to allow them to use the technology better or having more companies to think about technology in a more clear-eyed and hard-headed manner. And how are we supporting companies to do so?
It’s about understanding the technology – what you can do, what the limitations are. As His Excellency Artis Bertulis mentioned earlier, what you shouldn't do, what should remain in the domain of human skills and judgment. We are supporting companies in setting up their dedicated AI Centres of Excellence in Singapore. Since 2024, the government has partnered with over 50 companies to build up their internal AI capabilities and to develop AI solutions to address their business needs.
These companies have embraced more sophisticated AI applications. DBS, for example, has developed a Customer Service Officer (CSO) Assistant for their customer service officers to respond to queries more effectively. This Gen AI-powered CSO Assistant transcribes conversations in real-time, retrieves relevant information and assists with documentation. Overall, this has reduced call-handling times and improved information accuracy, improving the overall customer service experience of DBS’ customers. This is just one example of how companies are adopting technology into their workforce and supporting the needs of their employees.
Such progress was only made possible by willingness of companies to invest in AI, to experiment with the technology, even when outcomes weren't guaranteed; and to integrate this technology into the existing workforce and processes so many companies in the room here today, you are in the forefront of this bold experimentation and business transformation.
Prudential is another example. Last year, they launched the Prudential AI Lab in Singapore with the goal of accelerating the adoption of AI, GenAI and machine learning throughout the organisation to maximise operational efficiency and deliver a better customer experience. At its launch, the lab saw over 100 use cases submitted by employees from across Prudential’s 24 markets in Asia and Africa.
For companies who are thinking about making this leap, please reach out to us. We're happy to work together with you to set up your AI Centres of Excellence and to support your innovation experimentation in this space. By supporting companies at the forefront of innovation, we want to build the right skills, talent, and infrastructure needed for a thriving AI ecosystem.
To support this initiative, we launched the Enterprise Compute Initiative, which sets aside up to $150 million to give enterprises, including small and medium enterprises, access to cloud credits, AI tools and consultancy through partnerships with cloud service providers such as AWS, Google Cloud, and Microsoft. This initiative gives our enterprises the support to turn their AI ambitions into action.
We recognise that digital transformation is more than just technology use, but fundamentally about people, which is why workforce upskilling and reskilling remain central to Singapore's approach. We have launched initiatives such as a TechSkills Accelerator (TeSA) and SkillsFuture to provide training courses for workers to remain AI-relevant and AI-fluent in this fast-evolving AI space.
We look forward to working with companies like yourselves to go beyond just experimenting with technology. Through Centres of Excellence and other initiatives, we want to support AI innovation. But more importantly, we want to work together with you to help your employees become AI fluent and AI capable in this new age of digital economy and AI-enabled services.
The government's effort alone is not sufficient. We have to work in collaboration, in close partnership with industry and organisations, and certainly with important partners like EuroCham. Through regular dialogues and collaborative initiatives like today's summit, we bring like-minded partners together. Companies, individuals, and different parts of the value chain come together to think about what we can do together as an ecosystem.
This is something where we want to continue the conversation. One important aspect of future collaboration goes beyond innovation, adoption, technology, workforce development, reskilling, and transformation – it's about trust. We need to put in place governance frameworks that support the healthy growth, use, and adoption of AI.
We have worked with partners on this front, and it's about putting guardrails in place. AI investments and developments are moving at such a fast pace. We're seeing hundreds of billions of dollars in investment flowing into different parts of the AI ecosystem - from frontier AI models to infrastructure to data centres. Huge amounts of investment are going into AI technology, and our frontier models are making rapid improvements, becoming more capable and intelligent. But at the same time as we hurtle down the road of AI innovation, I think all of us who are concerned about governance and trust must also think about what guardrails to put in place.
It's almost like thinking about going down a mountain path. As we turn the corner, we know there's going to be a sharp turn ahead, so how do we put the guard rails in place so that if anything happens, we will not fall off the cliff. There will be guard rails and speed bumps available to make sure that we take care of the downside of any technology we use, whether in terms of societal negative consequences, making sure that we stay united as people and not allowing technology to pull us apart, or to make sure that people are not left behind.
How do we put in place those guard rails and trust? We were working with like-minded partners on this. One example of the initiative we launched is called AI Verify Foundation, which is a community set up to manage the open sourcing efforts and develop AI testing and assurance community for Responsible AI. To date, we have more than 200 corporate members in this community.
In February this year, the AI Verify Foundation and IMDA launched the Global AI Assurance Pilot, which taps on the community's expertise to share key insights on the challenges faced by industry in AI testing and to put in place the relevant best practices. The Global AI Assurance Sandbox continues this success, acting as testing ground for deployers to get their GenAI applications tested by specialist technical testers.
Wearing my other hat as the Senior Minister of State for the Ministry of Health, we are also looking at how we use technology, especially AI, in supporting our doctors, clinicians and healthcare professionals in delivering better healthcare services to Singaporeans and AI features prominently. How do you make sure we deploy AI in hospitals in healthcare settings? It gives assurance to the medical professionals and patients that there are safeguards and governance in place. Guidelines and testing kits developed by AI Verify Foundation play an important role.
For talent, we are working closely with industry partners through many programmes like TeSA to provide on-the-job training opportunities to workers – from fresh graduates to mid-career workers looking to transition into this tech industry. There are opportunities to work on real-world projects and problem statements to help our workers develop skills that are relevant and applicable to market needs.
To drive the AI sophistication, we want to see in our ecosystem, we also work closely with research institutions to do cutting-edge work on AI, including fundamental AI, applied AI, and AI for science. In April this year, A*STAR and ETH Zurich signed an MOU to deepen research collaborations in Applied AI for drug discovery and life sciences. This partnership commits to explore ways to harness AI to accelerate and de-risk drug discovery – making it faster, more targeted and cost-effective to deliver therapies to patients.
It is our belief that if we want to develop a vibrant ecosystem, it has to be open and collaborative – partnerships with enterprises, institutes of higher learning, and research institutions coming together to develop the ecosystem.
So, this is an invitation to all our companies here – I look forward to working and partnering with all of you in developing this AI ecosystem. I also look forward to many more conversations and platforms organised by EuroCham to bring like-minded companies together to discuss how we can take this partnership forward.
We are approaching the end of the year, so I would like to wish those who are celebrating a very Merry Christmas. Have a peaceful, quiet end-of-year holiday season and I look forward to a wonderful 2026 with all our friends again.
Thank you so much.