MDDI 演讲稿 · 2026-02-10

Josephine Teo 部长在谷歌新加坡「Google for Singapore 2026」的闭幕致辞

Josephine Teo 部长在谷歌新加坡「Google for Singapore 2026」的闭幕致辞

Josephine Teo · 数码发展及新闻部长 · Google for Singapore 2026 at Google Singapore

要点

  • 部长透露,距发言48小时后将发布的新加坡财政预算案将包含有关AI的「重大公告」,重点是推动企业、行业及劳动力加速采用AI。
  • 新加坡将数字发展划分为四大支柱——数字经济、数字社会、数字安全与数字政府——以社会成果而非技术普及本身衡量工作成效。
  • 新加坡相对于人口及GDP已拥有全球最密集的数据中心布局之一,并正通过降低能耗、使用更清洁能源及研究节能芯片与算法来推进绿色数据中心建设。
  • 谷歌宣布将在新加坡建立「谷歌云新加坡工程中心」,将AI代理从实验阶段推进至可支撑政府对公众服务的生产级系统。
  • 新加坡刷新后的国家AI战略被明确定位为「AI为公共利益服务——不仅惠及新加坡,也惠及全世界」,MedGemma与谷歌DeepMind合作项目被列为典型案例。
  • 新加坡将于2027年担任东盟轮值主席国,届时东盟成员国正在推进的数字经济协议预计将为在新加坡扎根的科技企业带来重要市场机遇。

完整译文(中文)

MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期: 2026-06-21

下午好,各位同事和朋友。感谢 Google 邀请我再次出席第二届 Google for Singapore。

Sinha 博士,阁下,美国驻新加坡大使,我来访 Google 的次数比您多得多。但每次来访都带来新的惊喜,与充满活力的 Google 新加坡团队的每一次互动,都让我相信我们能够共同创造更大的影响。

在我的工作中,我经常被问到:"新加坡如何看待数字发展?你们在 AI 方面有什么计划?"

科技领域目前最令人振奋的事物之一便是 AI。再过 48 小时,总理——同时也是我们的财政部长——将发表财政预算案声明。

在不透露过多的前提下,我可以分享的是:届时将有关于 AI 的重大宣布——尤其是我们将如何在企业界和劳动力群体中加速推动 AI 的应用。

在新加坡,我们喜欢说"akan datang",意思是"即将到来"。

将我们在 AI 领域所做的一切努力,植根于我们更广泛的数字发展理念之中,是非常有意义的。我们之所以选择用"数字发展"而非"数字技术"或"数字进步"来定义这一领域,是有其原因的。

您刚才听到的关于四大支柱的演讲,准确呈现了我们在问自己"我们希望从数字发展的努力中看到什么成果"时所考量的广度。

这不仅仅是拥有一个充满活力的数字经济,还关乎建立一个凝聚、稳定的数字社会——让人与人、社区与社区能够和谐共处——而这并非理所当然。

这涉及数字安全——其覆盖的全面程度,以及我们在日常线上与他人、系统和服务互动时所建立的信任。

作为政策制定者,我们同样重要的是不断自我挑战:如何成为一个进取的数字政府。不做落伍者,而是率先采用现有最先进工具的引领者,以提升对公民的服务质量,并让公民相信技术可以成为向善的力量。

作为政府,深入了解技术的运作方式同样至关重要。若非如此,我们将缺乏公信力,在思考如何施政以及何时制定监管措施时,也会受到相当大的局限。

这是我们对数字发展的整体思考框架。如果将其拆解,问"有哪些不同的组成部分和支柱",大致有以下几点:

网络世界中的一切都必须以某种形式的基础设施为根基。

数字管道的传输能力是有限的,除非持续投资扩充基础设施。这意味着不仅要建设数据中心,还要考虑如何构建网络——无论是移动网络还是宽带网络——以及如何规划将我们与其他国家、地区乃至全球相连的海底电缆。

所有这些数字基础设施都需要数年规划,因为它们不会一蹴而就。就目前我们的情况而言,尽管已拥有相当可观的数据中心容量——相对于人口和 GDP 的比例,密度居于全球前列——我们仍在持续创造增长空间。

我们希望以负责任、可环境持续的方式推进。这意味着建设更绿色的数据中心,核心归结为两点:降低能耗的数据中心,以及使用更清洁能源的数据中心。

除此之外,我们还有机会突破更多边界。

例如,我们对能够以更低能耗高效运行的芯片很感兴趣。我们甚至在问自己:"算法能否以更环保的方式编写?"

这里存在很大空间——不仅仅是投入更多资金扩充数据中心容量,还包括推动创新边界的突破,其成果最终将惠及的不仅是新加坡,还有全球众多受能源约束困扰的地方。而这仅仅是基础设施这一支柱。

许多讨论都已深入到这样的层次。我很高兴这些对话仍在持续推进。

数字发展的另一个重要领域是能力建设。在劳动力层面,能力建设的核心在于确保个人有信心、有能力使用 AI 工具,并借助 AI 所带来的力量,思考如何转型自身的工作流程及所在领域。

但个人能力发展只是其中一部分。对于那些感到已具备 AI 能力的个人而言,回到工作场所后却发现无人关注,是令人沮丧的。因此,将个人技能带入职场、转化为更高层次能力的承接力,正是当前所欠缺的。我们相信,一定有办法让两者相互配合、共同发力。

在产业和政府层面,同样需要进行能力建设。为此,我们需要汇聚研发社区的资源与同仁,以及政府内部科技团队的力量。

在这方面,Google 与新加坡同样有许多令人振奋的合作领域。

几个月前,Thomas Kurian 到访新加坡时,我们谈到新加坡在使用智能体(agents)和 Google Agentspace 方面的探索是一个良好的基础。我们将继续尝试并突破边界。

因此,得知 Google 将建设 Google Cloud 新加坡工程中心,我深感欣喜。原因在于,这并非纸上谈兵。当我们谈论 AI 智能体的潜力时,必须将其真正投入生产、找到适用场景,并构建可信赖的架构,尤其是在政府与公众互动的场合。

任何一个失效节点几乎都会引发过度关注,因此我们必须确保所有对外发布的内容都经过充分测试,并配备所有必要的安全保障措施。

还有另外三个领域,我不会在此逐一详述。

例如,Karen 刚才所描述的,正是我们在监管和立法方面的整体方针。

然而,新加坡在应对技术影响时所采取的做法,是首先审视现有法律法规是否已足以应对那些对社会无益或不可取的结果,然后再考虑是否需要制定新的法律法规。

在这一过程中,与谷歌等公司的对话让我们在做正确的事情上更加深思熟虑。感谢贵方持续与我们保持沟通,使我们能够在必要时采取更有意义的干预措施。

另一个领域是汇聚整个社群的力量。我们需要承认,在技术发展方面,答案不只存在于某一个实体之中。价值在于将人们凝聚在一起,让他们各抒己见,共同提出正确的解决方案。这也是我们乐于与谷歌合作的领域。

我想与谷歌分享的最后一个领域,是面向未来的机遇。我们相信,新加坡所创造的一切,若能让更多人从中受益,其影响力将更为深远。

正因如此,数年前当我们决定更新国家人工智能战略时,我们将其定位为造福公众的人工智能——不仅服务于新加坡,更服务于全世界。

这让我深感希望,尤其是当我看到我们正在推进的一些项目——MedGemma 与 Google DeepMind——正是我们如何进一步拓展潜力的有力例证。

我与世界各地的同仁保持互动。例如,下周三我将前往新德里出席 AI Impact Summit。五月,新加坡将举办 Asia Tech Summit,届时我们将汇聚各方同仁,共同探讨技术发展中的重要议题。在当前阶段,人工智能是最受关注的领域。

我也想建议谷歌思考,如何借助这些平台,将贵方在新加坡打造的产品、服务与创新成果展示给全世界。部分活动在新加坡举办,另一些活动则有新加坡参与其中——我们乐于借此分享这些激动人心的进展。

2027年,新加坡将担任东南亚国家联盟年度会议的主席国。ASEAN 领域将有许多与贵方息息相关的发展动态。

例如,ASEAN 成员国正在共同推进数字经济协议。该框架的某些内容将为谷歌等企业带来巨大机遇。尽管贵方立足新加坡,但市场延伸远不止于此。各方对贵方能够带入其他市场的创新成果也抱有极大兴趣。

我期待未来在众多不同领域与支柱方向上与贵方开展更多交流。

对于贵方在各个领域所取得的推进与进展,谨致祝贺。

我相信,下次造访时,将会见到更多创新成果与令人振奋的发展。再次致以祝贺。

英文原文

MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期: 2026-06-21

Good afternoon, colleagues and friends. Thank you to Google for inviting me back for the second edition of Google for Singapore.

Dr Sinha, Excellency, US Ambassador to Singapore, I've visited Google many more times than you. But each visit brings new surprises and each interaction with the very dynamic Google team in Singapore encourages me that there is greater impact that we can create together.

In my work, I'm often asked: “How does Singapore think about digital development? And what are your plans for AI?”

The most exciting things happening in technology include AI. In just 48 hours, the Prime Minister, who is also our finance minister, will be delivering the Budget statement.

What I can share, without giving too much away, is that there are very significant announcements about AI – particularly how we will accelerate its adoption in the industry amongst enterprises and within the workforce.

In Singapore, we like to say ‘akan datang’. It means ‘coming soon’.

It is useful to ground all efforts we are making in AI on our broader approach to digital development. There is a reason why we chose to think about it as digital development instead of digital technologies or digital advancement.

The presentation you just heard across the four different pillars accurately captures the breadth we think about when we ask ourselves: “what outcomes do we want to see from our efforts in digital development?”

It's not just having a vibrant digital economy. It's also about having a cohesive and stable digital society where people and communities can live harmoniously with one another, and that's not always a given.

It's about digital security, how comprehensive it is, how we trust day-to-day interactions we have online with other individuals, systems, and services.

It is also important for us as policy makers to challenge how we can be progressive as a digital government. Not laggards, but leaders in the adoption of the most advanced tools available, to improve the quality of our delivery to citizens and encouraging them to believe that technology can be a force for good.

It's also important for us as a Government to know exactly how technology operates. If we didn't, we would have little credibility and would also be quite circumscribed in how we think about the way to govern and when regulations make sense.

This is the broader thinking we have about digital development. If you unpack it and say: “what are the different components and pillars?” There are a couple:

Everything in the online world has to be grounded in some form of infrastructure.

There is only so much you can push through digital pipelines, unless you invest in growing infrastructure. That means putting in place not just data centres, but also how we build up the network – whether a mobile or broadband network -- and how we think about submarine cables that connect us to other countries, regions and globally.

All this digital infrastructure takes years of planning, because they don't materialise overnight. In our context right now, even though we have data centre capacity -- one of the densest, relative to our population and GDP -- we are still creating headroom.

We want to do it in a responsible way, one that is environmentally sustainable. That means greener data centres, which essentially boils down to two things: data centres that use less energy and data centres that use greener energy.

Beyond that, there is also opportunity to push the boundaries.

For example, we are interested in chips that can work effectively using less energy. We are even asking ourselves, “Can algorithms be written in a greener way?”

There is scope – not just putting more dollars to build up data centre capacity but also pushing the boundaries of innovation that could eventually benefit not just Singapore, but many other places that are energy constrained around the world. That is just the infrastructure pillar.

Many discussions go down to those levels of sophistication. I'm glad that those conversations are continuing.

Another important area in digital development is building capabilities. There are capabilities at the workforce level that speak to the importance of ensuring individuals have confidence and capacity to use AI tools and think about transforming their own work processes as well as their domains, with the power that AI brings to them.

But individual capability development is only one part. It is frustrating for individuals who feel AI-enabled to go back to their workplaces, only to find that no one else is interested. The capacity, then, to bring their individual skills into the workplace and transform into higher order capability is what is lacking. We believe there must be a way to make the two work together.

There is also capabilities development at the industry and government level. For that, we need to crowd in our resources and colleagues in the research and development community, and those amongst our technology teams working within the government.

Here again, there are many exciting areas that Google and Singapore can partner on.

A few months ago, when Thomas Kurian was in Singapore, we talked about how Singapore's experimentation with using agents and Google Agentspace is a good foundation. We are continuing to try and push the boundaries.

I'm therefore delighted to know that Google will build the Google Cloud Singapore Engineering Center. The reason is it’s not theoretical. When we talk about the potential of AI agents, you have to put into production, find the case, and architect you can count on, especially when the government interacts with the public.

A point of failure will almost always create too much excitement, and we want to ensure that whatever is put out is properly tested and built with all the necessary safeguards.

There are three other areas. I will not go into them in great detail.

For example, what Karen just described is our whole approach to regulations and legislation.

However, the approach we take in Singapore, especially when dealing with impacts of technology, is first to ask whether existing laws and regulations already enable us to deal with outcomes that may not be helpful or desirable for society, before we think about whether new laws or regulations need to be added.

In this process, conversations that we have with companies like Google makes us more thoughtful about the right things to do. Thank you for continuously engaging with us and enabling us to make more meaningful interventions when necessary.

Another area is crowding in the entire community. We need to accept that when it comes to technology developments, the answers lie in more than one entity. The value is in bringing people together, allowing them to offer their perspectives and suggest the right solutions. This is an area we enjoy working with Google on.

One final area I wanted to touch on and share with Google is an opportunity for the future. We believe that whatever we create in Singapore goes further when others get a chance to benefit from them.

That is why, some years ago, when we decided to refresh our National AI Strategy, we decided it should be AI for the Public Good – not just for Singapore, but also for the world.

That gives me a great sense of hope, especially when I see that some projects we are working on – MedGemma and Google DeepMind – are good examples of how we can stretch the potential further.

I interact with my colleagues around the world. For example, next Wednesday, I head to New Delhi for the AI Impact Summit. In May, Singapore is holding the Asia Tech Summit, where we bring together our colleagues to discuss the issues that matter in technology development. At the current time frame, AI is of greatest interest.

I would also like to suggest to Google to think about how the products, services, and innovations that you are creating in Singapore can be showcased to the world through these platforms. Some events take place in Singapore, and others where Singapore participates – we are happy to share those exciting developments.

In 2027, Singapore will chair the Association for Southeast Asian Nations’ annual meetings. There will be many developments in the ASEAN domain that will be relevant to you.

For example, ASEAN member states are coming together on a digital economy agreement. Some elements of this framework will have great opportunities presented to companies like Google. While you are anchored in Singapore, the markets extend beyond. There is also tremendous interest in the innovations that you can bring to other markets.

I look forward to all future exchanges we will have across many different domains and pillars.

Congratulations on all areas you have advanced and made progress on.

I am confident that the next time I visit, there will be more innovations and more exciting developments. Congratulations once again.