Business
Qatar establishes WEF's Centre for Fourth Industrial Revolution
December 08, 2024 | 12:12 AM
Qatar on Saturday established The World Economic Forum's (WEF) Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution (C4IR), formed and hosted by the Ministry of Finance.The centre, an autonomous non-profit entity on policy and governance for emerging technologies, was launched at the 22nd Doha Forum, which got underway."This landmark initiative is a testament to Qatar's unwavering commitment to harnessing the transformative power of technology and innovation to shape prosperous, inclusive, and sustainable future," said HE the Minister of Finance Ali bin Ahmed al-Kuwari in the presence of WEF president and chief executive officer Borge Brende.C4IR is the third in the Arab world and it will become a hub of expertise to co-design and pilot future-focused policy frameworks that enable the development and deployment of technology regionally and globally. It will collaborate with other national stakeholders from the private and public sectors."Through this centre, Qatar is not only embracing the future, but leading it by leveraging our position as a global hub for innovations to foster solutions that transcend borders and resonate the global priorities," he said.C4IR Qatar will be a platform through which Doha will shape the development of local and national fourth industrial revolution strategies in line with its national development strategy.The WEF had in January signed a collaboration agreement with Qatar to establish C4IR in Qatar.Highlighting that technology such as AI (artificial intelligence), IoT or Internet of Things, and advanced robotics are not just disruptive industries but are redefining possibilities; al-Kuwari said in line with Qatar National Vision 2030, this centre will serve as a catalyst for accelerating sustainable economic growth and achieving the country's strategic priorities.As a member of the WEF’s global C4IR network, the centre connects Qatar to a dynamic ecosystem of expertise, collaboration, and innovation across 18 countries in five continents, he said, adding this partnership will allow Doha to draw on global best practices, while tailoring solutions to the unique opportunities in Qatar."We aim to generate actionable knowledge to help businesses use fourth industrial revolution technology, as well as providing advice to develop agile policies and piloting impactful projects. We expect these developments to benefit from all segments of society, while safeguarding ethical integrity and sustainable standards," according to al-Kuwari.The C4IR is a platform for multi-stakeholder collaboration, bringing together public and private sectors to maximise technological benefits to society while minimising the risks.The WEF launched the first C4IR in San Francisco in 2017, followed by centres in Japan and India. The network now includes centres in Austin (Centre for Trustworthy Technology), Azerbaijan, Brazil, Colombia, Detroit (the US Centre for Advanced Manufacturing), Germany (Global Government Technology Centre), Israel, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Norway (HUB Ocean), Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Serbia, South Africa, Telangana (India), Turkiye and the UAE.
December 08, 2024 | 12:12 AM