MDDI 演讲稿 · 2023-06-14

部长杨莉明在SAP d com上的演讲

部长杨莉明在SAP d com上的演讲

Josephine Teo · 数码发展及新闻部长 · SAP d com

要点

  • SAP Labs Singapore 将在未来两年内通过经济发展局支持,从本地高等院校招募最多200名AI人才,涵盖AI科学家、AI开发及AI数据工程等岗位,完成后将使其现有工程师团队规模翻倍。
  • AI Singapore的「百项实验(100E)」计划将AI研究人员与企业配对,共同开发定制化AI产品;其中一项与大陆集团(Continental)合作开发的汽车显示屏优化AI工具已在全球多个开发中心部署落地。
  • TechSkills Accelerator旗下的「企业主导培训计划」自启动以来已培训并安置逾2,600名人才从事AI与数据分析岗位。
  • 过去五年,新加坡已在「研究、创新与企业」计划下向AI研发投入约5亿美元;未来六年,Schmidt Futures将资助最多110名博士后研究员在新加坡国立大学及南洋理工大学开展AI驱动的科学研究。
  • 新加坡上周发布《数字连接蓝图》,计划制定绿色数据中心发展路线图,以在扩大算力的同时回应可持续发展方面的关切。
  • 政府已将AI治理测试框架「AI Verify」开源,并由资讯通信媒体发展局(IMDA)与Aicadium联合发布生成式AI关键关切领域讨论文件,以推动负责任的AI应用。

完整译文(中文)

MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期: 2026-06-21

克拉斯·诺伊曼先生,全球SAP Labs网络高级副总裁兼负责人

蔡艾琳女士,SAP新加坡董事总经理

马尼克·萨哈先生,SAP Labs新加坡董事总经理

各位同事和朋友

大家早上好。我非常高兴能与大家共聚。

我很高兴听闻SAP Labs新加坡将扩建AI Hub。SAP Labs新加坡负责推动SAP全系企业产品套件中AI功能的开发。未来两年内,在经济发展局的支持下,据我了解,SAP计划从本地各高等院校招募多达200名年轻AI人才,分别担任AI科学家、AI开发及AI数据工程等职位。扩建完成后,这里的工程师团队规模将较现有规模翻倍。

我认为可以公允地说,贵方宣布扩建AI Hub,充分体现了集团对在新加坡培育AI人才的信心与承诺。这不仅是对新加坡的投入,也反映出对AI解决方案日益增长的需求——像SAP这样的全球企业已坐拥庞大的客户群。如今,许多客户都对AI能为他们带来什么感到好奇,并乐于接受贵方在如何利用AI提升运营效率、拓展增长机遇方面的建议,因为许多人已意识到AI将彻底变革各行各业和未来的工作方式。

波士顿咨询集团的部分研究表明,即便是适度的AI投入,也能为企业带来可观的营收增长。AI同样能使员工受益:随着技能的扩展,员工将能完成比以往更多的工作,并获得更高的职业满足感。但前提是雇主须在培训上投入资源,并对岗位进行合理的重新设计,以促进职业发展——因为AI扰乱劳动力市场的潜力同样不容忽视。有一种担忧是,AI将能够执行目前由人类承担的许多职能。我们应如何确保AI成为增强智能,助力于人而非取代人?这绝非小事,需要大量深思熟虑的干预与资本投入。

像SAP这样的大型企业软件公司,具备得天独厚的优势,可以帮助企业实现AI的巨大价值。凭借贵方横跨整体经济的广泛网络,你们已能清晰了解最新的AI赋能功能如何为客户创造新价值,并推动业务运营的转型,例如在供应链管理、客户关系管理和人力资源规划等领域。

AI潜力之所以触手可及,有赖于SAP Labs新加坡众多工程师和开发人员,以及全球范围内致力于运用AI提升企业能力和员工韧性的研究人员、工程师与开发者群体。在此过程中,我相信你们也以自己的方式,为我们希望在新加坡看到的愿景贡献力量——那就是将AI用于公共利益,这也是我上周在Asia Tech x Artificial Intelligence活动上所谈及的主题。

将AI用于公共利益,与我们在业界和学术界看到的诸多令人振奋的进展相辅相成。请允许我分享几项进展颇为顺利的工作。

第一项是我国国家AI计划——AI Singapore推出的百个实验(100 Experiments,即100E)计划。该计划认识到,业界有些问题难以通过现成的AI解决方案加以解决。100E通过将AI研究人员与企业配对,共同开发切合实际需求的定制化AI产品,从而填补这一空白,并对更广泛的行业产生深远影响。

以其中一个案例为例,AI Singapore与德国移动出行解决方案公司大陆集团(Continental)联合开发了一款AI工具,用于检查和优化车载显示屏的布局。该工具已在全球各地的开发中心投入使用,帮助大陆集团及其OEM客户节省了大量人工工时。

第二项是我们TechSkills Accelerator计划下设的企业主导培训计划(Company-Led Training Programme)。该计划认识到,帮助业界借助AI解决现实问题的项目,同样能推动AI人才培养体系的建设。这些项目为我们新晋AI人才提供了宝贵的在职培训机会,其中许多人今天就坐在这里。自启动以来,该计划已培训逾2,600名人才并将其安置于AI及数据分析相关岗位,未来仍有广阔空间可进一步拓展。

第三项工作涉及我们对科学界AI创新者的支持。过去五年间,我们在研究、创新与企业发展计划下投入了约5亿元用于AI研发。我很高兴分享一个消息:未来六年内,总部位于美国的慈善计划Schmidt Futures将在新加坡国立大学(NUS)和南洋理工大学(NTU)这两所本地大学资助多达110名博士后研究员。这些研究员将专注于运用AI加速科学、技术、工程和数学领域的发现。从我们与全球各AI生态系统的互动中可以了解到,凡具备深厚研究能力作为补充的生态系统,表现都要好得多。例如,几周前我访问旧金山时,在一个称为「Cerebral Valley」的地区,那里有黑客屋,汇聚了创始人和投资者,但他们同时也与研究界保持着紧密联系。有时,周五发布的研究论文,到了周末就已有人着手原型开发。这种健康生态系统所呈现的活力,正是我们希望在这里也能培育的。

毫无疑问,要释放AI的潜力,我们需要来自业界、研究机构、社区和慈善界的全力支持。事实上,上周,SAP Labs新加坡董事总经理马尼克·萨哈(Manik Saha)被任命为18位新加坡数字领袖之一。这是一个多元而充满干劲的群体,由新加坡科技生态系统中的杰出领导者组成,我们相信他们能够承担更多领导职责,推动新加坡数字经济迈上新台阶。

一个蓬勃发展的AI生态系统,还须有稳固的基础设施作为支撑。你们或许已经知晓,我们上周发布了新加坡《数字连接蓝图》(Digital Connectivity Blueprint)。该蓝图阐明了我们确保新加坡数字基础设施保持世界一流水平并面向未来的计划。与我们AI使命尤为相关的,是我们计划制定绿色数据中心路线图——因为我们深知AI需要消耗大量算力和能源。我们认为AI有助于应对可持续发展方面的挑战,但AI本身也必须变得更加节能。我们希望这将有助于在兼顾可持续发展关切的同时扩大算力容量。

最后,除了构建合作伙伴生态系统和稳固的基础设施外,培育公众对AI的信心与信任同样至关重要。SAP在利用大型语言模型实现可解释AI(Explainable AI)方面所作的努力,因此是这一方向上的重要举措。这些努力与政府自身推动负责任AI应用的工作相辅相成。政府的相关工作包括:决定将AI Verify开源——即我们去年推出的治理测试框架与工具包——以及IMDA与Aicadium联合发布讨论文件,着重指出生成式AI的若干关键关注领域。

最后,我谨向SAP Labs新加坡的全体同仁致以祝贺,祝贺你们AI Hub的扩建,以及今天在新加坡拉开首届年度SAP d-com的帷幕。逾200位同仁今日聚集于此,提醒我们:在任何能够将AI用于公共利益的健康生态系统中,人的因素始终是不可或缺的重要组成部分。

谢谢。

演讲PDF版本

英文原文

MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期: 2026-06-21

Mr Clas Neumann, Senior Vice President, Head of Global SAP Labs Network

Ms Eileen Chua, Managing Director, SAP Singapore

Mr Manik Saha, Managing Director, SAP Labs Singapore

Colleagues and friends

Good morning, everyone. I am very happy to be joining you.

I am glad to hear that SAP Labs Singapore, which drives the development of AI features across SAP’s entire enterprise product suite, will be expanding your AI Hub. Over the next two years, with the support of the Economic Development Board, I understand that SAP expects to hire up to 200 young AI talents from our institutes of higher learning. These will be to fulfill roles in AI Scientists, AI Development and AI Data Engineering. Once completed, this expansion will double your existing engineering workforce here.

I think it’s fair to say that your announcement to expand the AI Hub speaks to the group’s confidence in and commitment to building up AI talent in Singapore. It is an investment not just for Singapore’s benefit. It also reflects the growing demand for AI solutions, delivered by global companies like SAP, which already has a very large base of customers. Many of your customers are now curious about what AI can do for them. They are receptive to your suggestions on how to use AI to make their operations more efficient and expand their opportunities for growth, as many of them now recognise that AI is set to revolutionise industries and the future of work.

Some research by the Boston Consulting Group shows that even modest investments in AI can generate meaningful revenue growth for companies. AI can also bring benefits to employees. Through expanded skillsets, they should be able to do more than they are able to do before while enjoying greater job satisfaction. But this is provided their employers invest in their training and redesign jobs appropriately to promote career growth because the potential for AI to disrupt the labour market is also very real. There is a concern that AI will be able to perform many of the functions that are currently performed by humans. What do we do to ensure that this AI is augmented intelligence, and helps people rather than replaces them? This is not a trivial question and something that requires a lot of thoughtful intervention and capital implementation.

Large enterprise software companies like SAP are well positioned to help businesses realise the tremendous value of AI. Building on your wide-ranging networks across the economy, you would already be aware how the latest AI-powered features can bring new value to your customers, and transform business operations, such as in supply chain management, customer relationship management and human resource planning.

That the potential of AI is within grasp, is thanks to the many engineers and developers of SAP Labs Singapore, together with the community of researchers, engineers, and developers around the world that are helping to use AI to improve business capabilities and employee resilience. In doing so, I believe you are in your own way, also contributing to what we hope to see more of in Singapore, and that is the use of AI for the Public Good, which was what I spoke about during the Asia Tech x Artificial Intelligence event last week.

AI for the Public Good complements the many exciting developments we find in industry and academia. Allow me to share some efforts that are shaping up quite well.

The first is our 100 Experiments, or 100E initiative, by our national AI programme, AI Singapore. It recognises that there are some problems in industry that cannot be easily addressed by off-the-shelf AI solutions. 100E plugs this gap by matching AI researchers with companies to develop customised AI products that serve a real need, and that can also have significant impact on wider industry.

In one example, AI Singapore and German mobility solutions company Continental jointly developed an AI tool to check and optimise the layout of car displays. This tool has since been deployed across development centres worldwide and have helped save man-hours for Continental and its OEM customers.

The second is our Company-Led Training Programme under our TechSkills Accelerator initiative. It recognises that projects to help industry leverage AI to solve real-world problem statements can also boost our AI talent development pipeline. These projects are valuable opportunities for on-the-job training for our fresh AI talent, many of whom are seated here today. This programme has trained and placed more than 2,600 individuals in AI & Data Analytics job roles since it started, and there’s room for us to do more in this programme.

The third effort concerns our support for AI innovators in scientific communities. Over the last five years, we have invested about $500 million in AI R&D under our Research, Innovation and Enterprise plan. I am pleased to share that over the next six years, the US-based philanthropic initiative Schmidt Futures will fund up to a total of 110 postdoctoral fellows at our local universities, NUS and NTU. These fellows will focus on using AI to accelerate discoveries in science, tech, engineering and mathematics. And we know from all our interactions with AI ecosystems around the world that those ecosystems that are complemented by deep research capabilities do so much better. For instance, a couple of weeks back when I visited San Francisco and was in an area known as Cerebral Valley, there were hacker houses that had founders and investors. But they were also very connected to the research communities. And sometimes, the research papers that are produced on Friday already get prototyped on the weekend. The level of energy that you find in these healthy ecosystems is what we would also want to grow here.

There is no doubt that we will need the full support of partners from industry, research, community and philanthropy, to harness the potential of AI. Indeed, last week, your Managing Director of SAP Labs Singapore, Manik Saha, was appointed as one of 18 Singapore Digital Leaders. This is a diverse and driven group of capable Singaporean leaders in the tech ecosystem whom we believe can take on more leadership roles to help bring Singapore’s digital economy to the next level.

A thriving AI ecosystem must also be supported by robust infrastructure. You may be aware that we launched Singapore’s Digital Connectivity Blueprint last week. It sets out our plans to ensure that Singapore’s digital infrastructure remains world-class and future ready. Particularly relevant to our AI mission is how we plan to develop a roadmap towards Green Data Centres, because we know that AI uses a lot of compute and energy. And we think that AI can help to improve on our handling of challenges in sustainability, but the AI must itself become more energy sufficient. We hope that this will help us expand the compute capacity while taking care of sustainability concerns.

Finally, beyond having an ecosystem of partners and robust infrastructure, it is important also to nurture public confidence and trust in AI. Efforts by SAP to leverage large language models for Explainable AI are therefore important steps in this direction. They complement the Government’s own efforts to promote responsible AI use. These government efforts include our decision to open-source AI Verify, which is the Governance Testing Framework and Toolkit that we launched last year, as well as the release of a joint discussion paper by IMDA and Aicadium highlighting key areas of concerns with generative AI.

In closing, I want to congratulate everyone at SAP Labs Singapore on the expansion of your AI Hub and on kicking off the inaugural annual SAP d-com in Singapore today. That over 200 of you have gathered here today is a reminder that there is always a strong human component in any healthy ecosystem that can harness AI for the Public Good.

Thank you.

PDF version of the speech