MDDI 演讲稿 · 2026-06-04

何晶部长在野村投资论坛亚洲大会上的主题演讲

何晶部长在野村投资论坛亚洲大会上的主题演讲

Josephine Teo · 数码发展及新闻部长 · Nomura Investment Forum Asia

要点

  • 新加坡更新《国家人工智能战略》,设立由总理黄循财主持的国家人工智能理事会,确定互联互通、先进制造、医疗保健和金融四大优先领域,合计贡献逾40%的本地GDP。
  • 计划于2030年代中期开放、年旅客处理量新增5000万人次的樟宜机场5号航站楼,将部署人工智能用于客流管理、行李配送优化及跑道起降排序。
  • 新加坡现有数据中心容量达1.4GW,将进一步扩容,以确保云计算和人工智能工作负载所需的高性能算力稳定供给。
  • 作为全球领先的海底电缆枢纽,新加坡欢迎新电缆项目投资,预计将带动至少100亿新元的整体海底电缆投资。
  • 国家人工智能影响计划旨在培养10万名「AI双语」专业人才,使其在金融、法律、医疗等领域专业知识的基础上,具备实际运用人工智能的能力。
  • 该计划还计划支持至少1万家企业(包括占企业总数99%、雇用70%劳动力的中小企业)将人工智能切实整合到现有业务流程中。
  • 东盟数字经济服务逾6.5亿人口,预计到2030年规模将达1万亿美元,即将签署的《东盟数字经济框架协议》将进一步加速这一增长。

完整译文(中文)

MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期: 2026-06-21

野村副总裁中岛裕先生

野村亚太区首席执行官纳格斯·桑卡拉纳拉亚南先生

野村全球市场主管里格·卡尔哈尼斯先生

尊敬的各位同事与朋友,

下午好。我很高兴出席第23届野村亚洲投资论坛。

一位朋友告诉我,就在我们共进晚餐前的一个小时,他卖掉了一只股票,而在这段时间里,该股票价格已上涨了6%。事实上,这只股票在此前一个月内已累计涨超50%。与此同时,另一只股票的股价已上涨了45倍。当然,在不远的将来,我们或许还将见证万亿美元规模的IPO。

所幸,预测股价或设计投资组合策略并非我的本职。我的职责,是确保新加坡在数字时代——尤其是人工智能时代——为我们的人民和企业把握正确的机遇。

我们今天处于什么位置?若想获得更全面的了解,我推荐参阅这份文件。

简而言之,我们的人工智能生态系统发展态势相当良好。

这让我们有理由设定更高目标、加快推进步伐。

上个月,在Asia Tech X Summit上,我们宣布了《国家人工智能战略》的更新内容。我们正在更详细地阐明我们认为最大机遇所在。

我们的计划也旨在更好地支持由总理黄循财主持的国家人工智能理事会。理事会将重点推进国家人工智能使命,推动人工智能从小规模AI赋能项目的有限探索,迈向全行业转型。

我们优先聚焦四大领域——互联互通、先进制造、医疗保健与金融。你们比我更清楚,新加坡在每一个领域均具有全球地位。这四大领域合计贡献了我国GDP的逾40%。

相关工作已经展开。

以航空业为例,即将于2030年代中期启用的第五航站楼将新增5000万名旅客的年处理容量——我们需要重新思考空中枢纽的运营模式,确保旅客在我们的机场继续享有顺畅的出行体验。

因此,我们正在研究如何运用人工智能管理客流、优化多航站楼之间的行李传送,以及对跑道上的飞机起降顺序进行排序——这些都是真正复杂的问题,需要软硬件双重创新。

先进制造领域亦然,影响的广度与深度不可小觑。例如,实体人工智能——即能够思考的机器人——可助力流程再造,实现更优质的仿真模拟、数字孪生与预测性维护,从而减少停机时间。

在金融服务领域,人工智能有潜力拓展我们金融中心的广度与深度、增强金融韧性,并应对日益复杂的金融犯罪。事实上,AI智能体已开始自动化处理复杂的合规工作流程,或代表用户进行交易。

为支持上述使命,我们也在系统性地发展人工智能规模化所需的核心基础要素。

在算力方面,新加坡是区域数据中心枢纽,数据中心密度居亚太区前列。在现有1.4GW容量的基础上,我们将进一步扩容,确保可靠获取运行云计算与人工智能工作负载所需的高性能算力,以支撑我们的人工智能雄心。

在连通性方面,新加坡已跻身全球领先的海底电缆枢纽之列。我们持续欢迎新的电缆项目与投资——这有望带动至少100亿新元的整体海底电缆投资。

第二,在硬件之外,我们也将务实的人工智能治理列为优先事项。这有助于我们了解相关风险,并使我们得以坚守根本原则,包括个人或机构的问责制、监督机制,以及对所服务人群的关怀责任。

第三,我们正在为劳动力做好准备并持续投入。

我们人民的利益与关切是我们一切工作的核心所在,绝不能是事后的补充考量。

先进工具与行业专用模型不应在真空中运行;它们需要一支具备相应技能的劳动力队伍,来引导、监督这些工具,并将其安全融入现有工作流程。

但我要明确一点——这不仅仅是让人类驱动人工智能运转,而是让人工智能为人类服务。当我们思考人工智能的落地应用时,这一重点至关重要。

新加坡劳资政三方伙伴共同承诺,确保人工智能不会带来无就业增长。职位重新设计与劳动力再培训需要大规模推进。

在众多SkillsFuture项目的基础上,我们启动了国家人工智能影响计划(National AI Impact Programme)。

首先,我们的目标是培养10万名"AI双语"专业人士。这些人将自身在金融、法律、医学等领域的专业知识,与在工作中使用和应用人工智能的实践能力相结合。

这个理念其实很简单。举例而言,一位运用人工智能深化投资理念、对持仓进行压力测试的投资组合经理,不仅生产力更高,还拥有更锐利的竞争优势——最关键的是,最终做出决策的仍然是她本人。

我们还率先支持10,000家企业,将AI切实融入其现有业务流程。目标群体不仅是大型跨国公司,还包括占我国企业总数99%、雇用70%劳动力的中小企业。然而,它们是我国经济的重要贡献者,要么与前沿企业携手并进,要么沦为落后者。

通过这些有针对性的国家举措,我们正在培养本地劳动力,使其具备操作新一代工具的能力,确保在此扩张的企业能够获得装备齐全、充满信心、能够与技术共同成长的人才队伍。

通过提供基础设施、可信赖的护栏以及技能娴熟的劳动力,我们确保企业拥有构建和扩展AI解决方案的稳固基础。

在结束发言之前,我想与大家分享一点——作为东盟的一位数字部长,我被反复问及的一个问题是:地缘政治紧张局势是否会将数字世界分裂为各自独立的阵营。

坦率地说,这种情况确实可能发生,我们无法凭愿望消除这些紧张态势,但我们也绝不能因此陷入僵局、无所作为。

我和其他数字部长同仁都希望充分利用AI提振各自的经济。图中与我同框的是Henry Aguda,他是菲律宾的数字部长,菲律宾今年担任东盟轮值主席国。

但这不仅仅关乎构建基础设施和提升劳动力能力。同样重要的是,我们如何积极维护与美国、欧洲和中国合作伙伴的关系,寻找有实质意义的合作机遇——无论这些合作有多艰难,例如促进跨境数据流动,若无此举,数字基础设施将难以发挥最优效能。

这些交流涵盖范围广泛,包括与政策制定者和商界领袖的互动。我们认为,他们都有意愿和能力参与东盟的AI增长故事。

我们也希望在座各位如此。

我们诚邀更多人加入我们,投资那些正在新加坡及其他地方蓬勃发展的企业。

如此一来,您也将获得进入更广泛东盟市场的新通道。

东盟拥有逾6.5亿人口,数字经济规模有望于2030年达到1万亿美元,是举足轻重的增长引擎。

即将签署的《东盟数字经济框架协议》将进一步推动这一势头。

新加坡可以成为您的门户。在此经过测试和部署的AI解决方案,很可能在我们地区的其他地方同样大有用武之地。

您所获得的机遇不仅在于投资,更在于与我们充满活力的AI生态系统中的众多参与者携手共建。

纵观新加坡与整个东盟,深度合作的潜力不可限量。

我们欢迎大家成为我们AI枢纽的积极成员,立足新加坡,服务东盟,走向世界。

谢谢。

英文原文

MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期: 2026-06-21

Mr Yutaka Nakajima, Deputy President, Nomura

Mr Nags Sankaranarayanan, CEO, Nomura Asia Pacific

Mr Rig Karkhanis, Head of Global Markets, Nomura

Distinguished colleagues and friends,

Good afternoon. I am delighted to join you at this 23 rd Nomura Investment Forum Asia.

A friend told me they sold a stock just one hour before we had dinner, and in that time, the stock price had gone up by 6%. In fact, that stock had appreciated by more than 50% the month before. At the same time, another stock had increased 45 times in price. And of course, in the not-too-distant future, we could be looking at trillion-dollar IPOs.

Thankfully, I’m not in the business of predicting stock prices or designing portfolio strategies. I am however in the business of making sure Singapore invests in the right opportunities for our people and businesses in the digital era, and in particular the age of AI.

Where are we today? For a more comprehensive view, I recommend this document.

In a nutshell, our AI ecosystem is shaping up reasonably well.

It is giving us reasons to aim higher and move faster.

Last month, at the Asia Tech X Summit, we announced an update to our National AI Strategy. We are fleshing out in greater detail where we see the biggest opportunities.

Our plans are also designed to better support the National AI Council chaired by Prime Minister Lawrence Wong. Among other things, the Council will focus on National AI missions to move AI beyond experimentation in small-scale AI-enabled projects into sector-wide transformation.

We are prioritising four sectors - Connectivity, Advanced Manufacturing, Healthcare, and Finance. You know better than I that Singapore has global standing in each of these areas. Together, they contribute over 40% of our GDP.

The work has already begun.

For example, in aviation, the upcoming Terminal 5, which is supposed to open its doors in the mid-2030s, will add 50 million passengers in annual handling capacity – we need to rethink how our air hub operates to ensure that passengers continue to have a smooth experience at our airports.

We are therefore looking at how AI can be used to manage passenger flow, optimise baggage delivery across multiple terminals, and sequence aircraft landings and take-offs on our runways – all of which are genuinely complex problems that need both hardware and software innovations.

Likewise in advanced manufacturing, the scope and scale for impact is significant. For instance, physical AI – robots that can think – can help with process redesign, allowing for better simulations, digital twins, and predictive maintenance, which will reduce downtime.

In the financial services sector, AI has the potential to expand the breadth and depth of our finance hub, strengthen financial resilience, and tackle increasingly sophisticated financial crime. In fact, AI agents are already beginning to automate complex compliance workflows or transact on behalf of users.

To support these missions, we are also systematically developing the core enablers that AI requires to scale.

On compute, Singapore is a regional data centre hub with one of the highest concentrations of data centres in the region. Beyond the existing 1.4GW of capacity, we will expand further to ensure reliable access to the high-performance compute needed to run cloud and AI workloads, and to support our AI ambitions.

On connectivity, Singapore is already one of the world's leading submarine cable hubs. We continue to welcome new cable projects and investments — which will potentially catalyse at least S$10 billion in overall subsea cable investment.

Second, alongside hardware, we are also prioritising practical AI governance. This helps us understand the risks involved, and will allow us to uphold the fundamentals such as human or organisational accountability, oversight, and a duty of care to the people that we serve.

Third, we are preparing and investing in our workforce.

The interests and concerns of our people are front and centre of all we do. They are not and cannot be an afterthought.

Advanced tools and industry-specific models should not operate in a vacuum; they require a workforce that has the skills to guide, supervise, and integrate them safely into existing workflows.

But I want to be clear – this is not just about getting humans to make AI work. It is about getting AI to work in support of humans. This emphasis is absolutely critical when we think about AI implementation.

The tripartite partners in Singapore share the commitment that AI does not lead to jobless growth. Job re-design and workforce re-skilling will need to happen at scale.

To add to the many SkillsFuture programmes, we launched the National AI Impact Programme.

For a start, we aim to nurture 100,000 "AI Bilingual" professionals. These are people who combine their domain expertise, in fields like finance, law, and medicine, with a practical understanding of how to use and apply AI in their roles.

The idea is simple enough. For example, a portfolio manager who uses AI to sharpen her investment thesis and stress-test her positions is not just more productive, she has a sharper edge and critically, she remains the one making the call.

We are also supporting 10,000 firms for a start to integrate AI meaningfully into their existing business processes. The target audience is not just large multinationals, but the SMEs that make up 99% of our enterprises and employ 70% of our workforce. However, they are major contributors to our economy, and either they move ahead together with companies at the frontier or they become laggards.

Through these targeted national initiatives, we are preparing our local workforce to operate these next-generation tools, ensuring that businesses scaling here have access to a workforce that is equipped, confident, and able to grow alongside technologies.

By providing the infrastructure, the trusted guardrails, and a skilled workforce, we ensure that businesses have a stable foundation to build and scale their AI solutions.

So let me wrap up my comments by sharing with you, as a digital minister in ASEAN, one question I am consistently asked is whether geopolitical tensions will fracture the digital world into separate blocs.

Well, honestly, it can happen and we can't wish these tensions away, but neither must we be frozen into inaction.

My fellow digital ministers and I want to make the most of AI to uplift our economies. Here you see me with Henry Aguda, who is my digital minister counterpart from the Philippines, who is chairing the Philippines’ ASEAN Chairship this year.

But this is not just about building up our infrastructure and workforce capabilities. It is also how we can actively maintaining ties with our partners in the US, Europe and China, and finding openings for meaningful collaborations, however hard these collaborations may be, such as facilitating cross-border data flows, without which digital infrastructure will be sub-optimised.

These engagements are broad ranging, including with policy makers as well as business leaders. We see them all as having the interest and capacity to be part of the AI growth story in ASEAN.

We hope you do too.

We invite more of you to join us and invest in the companies here that are growing in Singapore and elsewhere.

In doing so, you will also gain new access to the wider ASEAN market.

With a population of over 650 million and a digital economy that is on track to reach US$1 trillion by 2030, ASEAN is a significant engine of growth.

The upcoming ASEAN Digital Economic Framework Agreement will only add to this momentum.

Singapore can be your gateway. AI solutions tested and deployed here may well find good uses in other parts of our region.

The opportunity for you is not just to invest, but to build together with the many players in our vibrant AI ecosystem.

Across Singapore and ASEAN, there is much potential for deep partnerships.

We welcome you all to be an active member of our AI Hub, to grow in Singapore, for ASEAN, and the world.

Thank you.