MDDI 演讲稿 · 2025-05-09
张仁宝部长在新加坡电脑学会颁奖晚宴暨2025年科技领袖奖上的致辞
张仁宝部长在新加坡电脑学会颁奖晚宴暨2025年科技领袖奖上的致辞
要点
- • 新加坡于2025年首次在亚洲承办国际学习表征大会(ICLR),现场参与人数创历史新高达11,000人,同期还举办了新加坡人工智能大会(SCAI)及新加坡AI研究周。
- • 逾百位全球AI领袖(包括Yoshua Bengio与Max Tegmark)联合发布「新加坡共识」,确立全球AI安全研究三大优先方向:风险评估、构建可信度及管控AI系统。
- • 新加坡首席AI枢纽Lorong AI自启动四个月内已举办逾40场活动,定期汇聚来自业界与政府的200余名AI从业者。
- • 逾50,000名公务员(占公共服务人员总数三分之一)定期使用政府自研的安全AI生产力工具Pair,并已在AIBots平台上创建数千个实验性聊天机器人。
- • 新加坡计划五年内将AI从业者规模从5,000人三倍增至15,000人,目前该群体在过去约一年内已增长近25%,相关举措涵盖资科局TeSA计划及扩大后的AI学徒计划。
- • 2025年新增19名新加坡数字领袖,自2022年计划启动以来累计任命总数达68人,新加坡数字领袖加速计划配有逾1,500人的全球导师网络。
完整译文(中文)
MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期: 2026-06-21
数码发展与新闻部长杨莉明女士在2025年新加坡电脑学会晚宴暨科技领袖奖颁奖典礼上的开幕致辞(2025年5月9日)
新加坡电脑学会会长林美君女士,
高级政务部长陈杰豪先生,
各位嘉宾,
女士们、先生们,
很高兴今晚与各位共聚,出席本年度新加坡电脑学会晚宴。请允许我首先恭贺今年所有科技领袖奖得主——干得漂亮!
大约一年半前,我出席贵会2023年Tech3论坛时,曾注意到一个巧合——活动举办当日恰逢总统选举投票日。
几个月前,我翻看日历时,以为新加坡电脑学会又一次选在了政治意义重大的日子举办活动。但事实证明,总理另有安排。
事实也证明,过去几周各方注意力高度集中于大选,以至于科技界其他几项极为重要的活动几乎完全被忽视了。
其中之一,是新加坡承办年度国际学习表征会议(ICLR)。
毫不夸张地说,ICLR是全球最顶尖的人工智能/机器学习研究人员聚集的三大顶级会议之一。
ICLR不仅首次在亚洲举办,现场参会人数更创下11,000人的历史新高。ICLR从未有过如此高的现场参与人数,而这一纪录诞生在新加坡。
与ICLR同期,还举办了多项促进人工智能领域国际学术交流的活动。
其中包括第二届新加坡人工智能会议(SCAI)——我在开始第四天竞选活动之前主持了开幕式,
以及新加坡人工智能研究周。
正因为这些活动,许多领域泰斗在新加坡度过了美好时光,其中一些人是首次来访。
例如,现代人工智能三位教父之一的Yoshua Bengio在SCAI上发表了演讲。
他热情地倡导加强人工智能治理,这印证了我的观点——深化研究人员与政策制定者之间的交流至关重要,唯有如此,人工智能安全研究才能转化为有效的治理政策。
Yoshua与来自生命未来研究所的Max Tegmark等100余位全球人工智能领域领军人物,共同参与撰写了关于全球人工智能安全研究优先事项的《新加坡共识》。
专家们在新加坡期间确定了三项核心优先事项——风险评估、构建可信度,以及对人工智能系统的管控。相关内容可在《连线》(Wired)最新一期中阅读。
我们希望《新加坡共识》能够成为全球人工智能安全对话的新基础,并期待在五月底即将举行的ATxSummit上与其他数字事务部长共同分享。
上个月,许多其他人工智能领域的杰出人士也纷纷来访新加坡。
例如,在竞选期间,我抽时间与现代人工智能三位教父之一的Yann Le Cun会面,探讨人工智能应用的机遇。
这着实令人叹为观止。三位人工智能教父中的两位在同一周内都出现在新加坡,这种概率实属罕见。
令我倍感欣慰的是,这些泰斗拨冗参与新加坡人工智能研究周逾30项活动,与我们的人工智能社群交流并给予启迪。
我与各位分享这些,并非因为我是新加坡旅游局的形象大使,热衷于提升旅游收入。
而是因为新加坡人工智能活动的广度与深度与日俱增,国际人工智能社群对新加坡发展潜力的认知也在不断提升——这些都不容忽视。
毕竟,当我们在更新版国家人工智能战略中确立"人工智能造福公众、服务新加坡与世界"的愿景时,正是为了将新加坡打造为充满活力的人工智能创新枢纽,使其影响力辐射海外。
我很高兴这一愿景正在稳步实现,这里已出现一个充满活力的人工智能生态系统正在成形的迹象。
例如,Lorong AI已确立其作为新加坡首要人工智能枢纽的地位,并在新加坡汇聚了一个强大而充满活力的人工智能社群。
其协作空间定期汇聚来自业界和政府的逾200名AI从业者,共同学习、交流新想法。
Lorong AI自开幕以来四个月内已举办逾40场活动,并持续每周举办多场活动。活动形式涵盖实操产品工作坊到技术深度研讨,由本土AI专家、全球顶尖研究人员以及OpenAI、AWS等行业先驱主持。
我们也看到有前景的公私合作关系正在Lorong AI中逐步形成。其中一项合作探索开发一款智能体工具,用于评估大型语言模型(LLMs)的推理能力。
在政府内部,逾50,000名用户——即全体公务员的三分之一——定期使用Pair(一款内部安全版ChatGPT)来提升工作效率。
公务员已利用AIBots平台创建了数千个实验性聊天机器人,并创新开发了从解答人力资源查询到引导同事完成预算和采购流程等一系列解决方案。
许多业界合作伙伴也相继在新加坡设立AI卓越中心(AI CoEs),以创新、构建和部署AI赋能解决方案。
去年,科技、医疗、制造及交通领域的企业共设立了26个AI CoEs。
这一势头仍在持续。
明年一月,我们还将举办人工智能促进协会(AAAI)人工智能大会——这是一项传统上仅在北美举办的顶级AI会议。
在拓展AI机遇的同时,我深刻意识到各界对AI取代工人岗位的担忧。这些担忧是真实存在的,但我们也必须认识到,AI将创造新的就业机会。
例如,随着AI在经济各行业的应用不断扩大,对部署、测试AI并确保其安全性与治理合规性的AI人才需求将随之增长。
因此,我们必须着力将更多此类新兴岗位留在新加坡。
为满足未来对更多AI从业者的需求,我们正积极构建充实的AI从业者人才储备,目标是在五年内将人才池规模从5,000人扩大至15,000人,实现三倍增长。
其中一项举措是在IMDA的TechSkills Accelerator(TeSA)框架下提供更多企业主导的培训机会。
我们也正与AI Singapore共同扩大AI学徒计划。
我们估计,过去一年左右,人才池规模已增长近25%。
除针对性的AI技能培育工作外,我们将继续扩大科技人才储备,以满足企业需求。
雇主的一个重要人才来源是理工学院和工艺教育学院(ITE)毕业生——这正是我们的SMS Tan一直大力推动的工作。
新加坡计算机学会(SCS)与SGTech也通过TIP Alliance(TeSA for ITE and Polytechnic Alliance)积极倡导企业以技能而非单纯学历为导向,录用上述毕业生。
与此同时,我们也将培育更多新加坡人成为科技领域的领导者,正如在座的许多人一样。
为此,IMDA已与业界(包括全球科技企业)合作,推出新加坡数字领导力加速计划(SGDLA)。
优秀的新加坡科技专业人才将通过该加速计划获得在海外市场拓展全球视野的机会。
他们还将有机会获得来自逾1,500人导师网络中经验丰富的全球科技高管或创始人的指导。
例如,2022年SG Digital Leader Gan Hao Yi通过这一网络与其导师Chang Ling Siow结缘。
作为导师,Ling鼓励Hao Yi考虑参加高管管理教育课程以促进职业成长,这使Hao Yi得以晋升至更重要的职位,出任戴森(Dyson)全球软件战略与转型主管。
两人至今保持密切联系,共同探寻新机遇。
通过该加速计划,我们希望帮助更多新加坡人做好准备,使其能够在跨国企业的全球或区域总部,或高增长初创企业中担任高级领导职位。
我很高兴今天宣布,今年又有19名新加坡人获委任为SG Digital Leaders。自2022年计划启动以来,获委任的领导者总人数已达68人。
他们来自数字生态系统的各个领域,涵盖产品管理、AI以及量子计算等新兴技术。
我期待SG Digital Leaders为新加坡及各自领域作出更多振奋人心的贡献。
再次向今晚所有荣获2025年科技领袖奖的得奖者致以诚挚祝贺,感谢各位为新加坡蓬勃发展的科技领域所作出的卓越贡献。
祝各位度过一个美好的夜晚!
英文原文
MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期: 2026-06-21
Opening Address by Mrs. Josephine Teo, Minister for Digital Development and Information, at SCS Gala Dinner & Tech Leader Awards 2025 (9 May 2025)
President of the Singapore Computer Society Ms Lim Bee Kwan,
Senior Minister of State Mr Tan Kiat How,
Distinguished Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I am happy to join you tonight for this year’s SCS Gala Dinner. Allow me to first congratulate all the recipients of this year’s Tech Leader Awards – well done!
About a year and a half ago, when I attended your 2023 Tech3 Forum, I had noted how uncanny it was that the event was being held on polling day for the Presidential Elections.
A few months ago, when I was browsing my calendar, I thought the SCS may once again have picked a politically significant day for this event. But it turns out the Prime Minister had other plans.
As it also turned out, so much attention had been drawn to the General Elections in the last few weeks, that other very significant events for the tech community went almost completely unnoticed.
The first of this is Singapore’s hosting of the annual International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR).
It is not an exaggeration to say that the ICLR is one of the top three conferences where the world’s most prominent researchers in AI/ML gather.
Not only was ICLR being held for the first time in Asia, in-person participation hit a new high of 11,000. ICLR has never had such high in-person participation, and they did it in Singapore.
Along with ICLR, there were several other events fostering international scientific exchanges in AI.
This includes the second edition of the Singapore Conference on AI (SCAI), which I opened before starting on day four of election campaigning,
as well as the Singapore AI Research Week .
And because these events, many luminaries of the field spent good time in Singapore, some for the first time.
For example, Yoshua Bengio, one of the three godfathers of modern AI who spoke at SCAI.
He advocated passionately for stronger AI governance, which reinforced my point about the importance of deepening exchanges between researchers and policymakers, so that AI safety research can be translated into effective policies that govern AI well.
Yoshua and over 100 other global leaders in AI, including Max Tegmark of the Future of Life Institute, also contributed to “The Singapore Consensus” on the priorities for global AI safety research.
While in Singapore, the experts identified three key priorities – Risk assessment, developing trustworthiness, and controlling AI systems. You can read about this in the latest edition of “Wired”.
We hope that the “The Singapore Consensus” will serve as a new foundation for global conversation on AI safety, and I look forward to sharing it with other Digital Ministers at the upcoming ATxSummit in end-May.
Many other AI luminaries were in town last month too.
For example, in the midst of the hustings, I caught up with Yann Le Cun, another of the three godfathers of modern AI, to discuss opportunities in AI adoption.
It’s actually quite remarkable. What are the odds that two out of three of the godfathers of AI were in Singapore in a single week?
I am heartened these luminaries made the time to speak to, and inspire, our AI community as part of the 30+ activities at the Singapore AI Research Week .
I share these with you not because I’m an ambassador for the Singapore Tourism Board excited about increasing tourism receipts.
But it’s really about the growing breadth and depth of AI activities in Singapore, and the increasing awareness of the international AI community about the possibilities here; and these are not to be disregarded.
After all, when we set out the vision of “AI for the public good, for Singapore and the world” in our refreshed National AI Strategy, it was precisely to anchor Singapore as a vibrant hub for AI innovations that could have broader impact beyond our shores.
I am glad that this vision is steadily being realised, and there are signs of a dynamic AI ecosystem taking shape here.
For example, Lorong AI has established itself as Singapore's premier AI hub, and has anchored a strong and vibrant AI community in Singapore.
Its collaborative space regularly brings together over 200 AI practitioners from across industry and Government to learn together and exchange new ideas.
Lorong AI has hosted over 40 events in the four months since launch, and continues to host multiple events weekly. These range from hands-on product workshops to technical deep-dives that are conducted by our homegrown AI experts, leading global researchers, and industry pioneers such as OpenAI and AWS.
We are also seeing promising public-private partnerships start to form out of Lorong AI. One such partnership explores the development of an agentic tool to evaluate the reasoning capabilities of LLMs.
In Government, over 50,000 users, or one-third of all public officers, regularly use Pair, an in-house secure version of ChatGPT, to enhance productivity.
Public officers have created thousands of experimental chatbots using our AIBots platform, and have innovated solutions ranging from answering HR queries to guiding colleagues through budget and procurement processes.
Many industry partners have also set up AI Centres of Excellence (AI CoEs) to innovate, build, and deploy AI-enabled solutions in Singapore.
Last year, 26 AI CoEs were set up by companies across tech, healthcare, manufacturing, and transport.
And we continue to see more.
Next January, we will also host the Association for the Advancement of AI, or AAAI’s, Conference on Artificial Intelligence – A leading AI conference that has traditionally only been held in North America.
As we grow our AI opportunities, I’m keenly aware of the concerns about its displacement impact on workers. These concerns are real, but we must also recognise that AI will create new jobs.
For example, as AI adoption grows across the many sectors in the economy, there will be greater demand for AI talent to deploy, test, and ensure its safety and governance.
We must therefore focus on anchoring more of these new jobs in Singapore.
To meet this future demand for more AI practitioners, we are actively growing a strong pipeline of AI Practitioners with a view to triple our pool from 5,000 to 15,000 over five years.
One of the ways we are doing so, is by providing more company-led training opportunities under the IMDA’s TechSkills Accelerator (TeSA).
We are also expanding the AI Apprenticeship Programme together with AI Singapore.
We estimate that the pool has already grown by nearly 25% in the last year or so.
Besides targeted efforts in AI skills development, we will continue to grow our bench of tech talent to meet companies’ needs.
One significant talent pool for employers are our polytechnic and ITE graduates – an effort that our SMS Tan has been championing.
And the SCS, together with SGTech, have been strong advocates through the TIP Alliance [TeSA for ITE and Polytechnic Alliance], for companies to hire these graduates for skills rather than just academic qualifications.
At the same time, we will also nurture more Singaporeans to become leaders in tech, like many of you are.
To do so, IMDA, has partnered with industry, including global tech firms, to offer the Singapore Digital Leadership Accelerator (SGDLA).
Promising Singaporean tech professionals are given opportunities under the Accelerator to gain global exposure in overseas markets.
They will also have the opportunity to be mentored by experienced global tech executives or founders from a network that is 1,500-strong.
For example, 2022 SG Digital Leader, Gan Hao Yi was connected to his mentor Chang Ling Siow through this network.
As mentor, Ling encouraged Hao Yi to consider Executive Management education programmes for professional growth. Doing so has allowed Hao Yi to advance to a larger role as the Head of Global Software Strategy and Transformation at Dyson.
They remain in close contact with each other, seeking out new opportunities.
With this Accelerator, we hope to prepare many more Singaporeans to take on senior leadership positions in MNCs’ global or regional headquarters, or in high-growth start-ups.
I am happy to announce today, that 19 more Singaporeans have been appointed as SG Digital Leaders this year. This brings the total number of Leaders appointed to 68 since the programme was started in 2022.
They come from across the digital ecosystem, including product management, AI, and emerging technologies such as quantum computing.
I look forward to more inspiring contributions from SG Digital Leaders to Singapore and your fields.
And once again, to all recipients of the Tech Leader Award 2025 who will be honoured tonight, congratulations. And thank you all, for your very significant contributions to Singapore’s vibrant tech sector.
Have a great evening!