
Inaugural AI summit at Science Park underscores the city’s accelerated push to lead in artificial intelligence, research, and international technology collaboration
Hong Kong has significantly reinforced its ambition to become a leading global technology and artificial intelligence hub by hosting a major AI summit and highlighting ambitious policy and infrastructure commitments.
On January 16, the city launched the inaugural 2026 WAIC Up! Global Summit at the Hong Kong Science Park, drawing government officials, industry experts and international delegates to explore the role of AI in economic growth, social inclusion and technological progress.
Chief Executive John Lee emphasised that artificial intelligence must underpin both innovation and sustainable development, stressing government investment, strategic infrastructure and an open market as core pillars of Hong Kong’s tech strategy.
Secretary for Innovation, Technology and Industry Sun Dong outlined ongoing enhancements to the city’s computing power — now reaching a combined capacity of five thousand petaflops — and pointed to the expansion of advanced data facilities designed to support AI and data industries.
These developments dovetail with broader efforts to cultivate talent by including AI specialists on official talent lists, simplifying pathways for global experts to work in Hong Kong.
Additional events and initiatives have reinforced this trajectory.
Earlier summits, such as the inaugural Semiconductor Innovation and Intelligent Application Summit co-hosted by the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and SEMI, brought together more than six hundred leaders from research, industry and government to drive collaboration on semiconductor breakthroughs and intelligent applications.
Partnerships between major technology firms and local incubators — such as the AI Partnership Programme co-organised by Microsoft Hong Kong and Cyberport — are nurturing local start-ups and facilitating the adoption of AI solutions across sectors.
Policy measures outlined in the government’s recent address, including the establishment of a HK$3 billion Frontier Technology Research Support Scheme and the creation of a Hong Kong AI Research and Development Institute, aim to catalyse both foundational research and practical commercialisation.
These developments — spanning global summits, cross-sector collaborations and enhanced R&D investment — signal Hong Kong’s concerted effort to embed AI and advanced technologies at the centre of its economic and innovation identity, positioning the city as a vibrant nexus for international technology exchange, research excellence and industry leadership.
On January 16, the city launched the inaugural 2026 WAIC Up! Global Summit at the Hong Kong Science Park, drawing government officials, industry experts and international delegates to explore the role of AI in economic growth, social inclusion and technological progress.
Chief Executive John Lee emphasised that artificial intelligence must underpin both innovation and sustainable development, stressing government investment, strategic infrastructure and an open market as core pillars of Hong Kong’s tech strategy.
Secretary for Innovation, Technology and Industry Sun Dong outlined ongoing enhancements to the city’s computing power — now reaching a combined capacity of five thousand petaflops — and pointed to the expansion of advanced data facilities designed to support AI and data industries.
These developments dovetail with broader efforts to cultivate talent by including AI specialists on official talent lists, simplifying pathways for global experts to work in Hong Kong.
Additional events and initiatives have reinforced this trajectory.
Earlier summits, such as the inaugural Semiconductor Innovation and Intelligent Application Summit co-hosted by the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and SEMI, brought together more than six hundred leaders from research, industry and government to drive collaboration on semiconductor breakthroughs and intelligent applications.
Partnerships between major technology firms and local incubators — such as the AI Partnership Programme co-organised by Microsoft Hong Kong and Cyberport — are nurturing local start-ups and facilitating the adoption of AI solutions across sectors.
Policy measures outlined in the government’s recent address, including the establishment of a HK$3 billion Frontier Technology Research Support Scheme and the creation of a Hong Kong AI Research and Development Institute, aim to catalyse both foundational research and practical commercialisation.
These developments — spanning global summits, cross-sector collaborations and enhanced R&D investment — signal Hong Kong’s concerted effort to embed AI and advanced technologies at the centre of its economic and innovation identity, positioning the city as a vibrant nexus for international technology exchange, research excellence and industry leadership.














































