China’s AI-related companies total 1.67 million in first half of 2024 amid ChatGPT frenzy

Mainland China added more than 237,000 new companies involved in artificial intelligence (AI) during the first half of this year, according to corporate database platform Qichacha, taking the total to 1.67 million amid Beijing’s efforts to foster the technology’s development.

Of that total, more than 1.48 million – almost 90 per cent – were set up after 2017, when the State Council, the country’s cabinet, published the Next Generation Artificial Intelligence Development Plan that outlined a goal to become a world leader in the technology. The Post’s search included all companies with AI in their name, patent portfolio and scope of business.

The annual number of new AI-related company registrations hit a record of more than 467,000 last year, which came on the heels of Microsoft-backed OpenAI’s release of ChatGPT on November 30, 2022 – when the public gained access to a chatbot that can quickly draft emails, craft speeches or summarise documents based on simple prompts from users.

That number eclipsed the mainland’s 56,000 new AI-related company registrations in 2018, a year after Beijing’s AI development plan was published, as more firms scrambled to become involved in developing chatbots and large language models – the technology underpinning generative AI services like ChatGPT.

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Various icons of Chinese-developed generative artificial intelligence applications on a screen. Photo: Shutterstock

That growth in AI-related company registrations reflects China’s new unicorn boom that has so far yielded four “AI tigers”Baichuan, Zhipu AI, Moonshot AI and MiniMax – each of which has raised billions of dollars from deep-pocketed investors.

Still, brutal competition is also cutting the number of AI firms in the market. About 419,000, or less than 90 per cent, of mainland AI enterprises that set up shop last year, continue to operate, Qichacha data showed.

Beijing, however, remains undeterred in providing further policy support for the nascent AI industry.

Premier Li Qiang earlier this year at the Two Sessions – the collective term for the annual plenary sessions of the National People’s Congress and the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference – introduced the AI Plus initiative that aims to integrate the technology across traditional industries to help boost efficiency and economic growth.

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