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[Extreme Civilization] 2020 Western Sydney Airport SummitAuthor: JEFFI CHAO HUI WU Time: 2025-7-28 Monday, 11:27 PM ········································ [Extreme Civilization] 2020 Western Sydney Airport Summit From November 5 to 6, 2020, the Western Sydney Airport and Greater Sydney Planning Summit was officially held at the PARKROYAL hotel in Parramatta, Sydney. This summit was jointly hosted by the Australian Federal Government, the Sydney Metropolitan Development Authority, the Airport City Infrastructure Alliance, and other organizations, focusing on multidimensional discussions on urban planning, aviation, logistics, and smart technology related to the upcoming construction of the Western Sydney International Airport. As one of the invited speakers, I represent the Australia Changfeng Group at this conference. This is my first time standing on such an important platform, which includes the Australian Deputy Prime Minister, various government departments, international airport groups, university AI professors, multinational technology companies (such as NEC), and regional economic institutions, as the sole representative of a Chinese enterprise. During the speech segment, I shared practical experiences regarding smart supply chains, e-commerce platforms, and the collaborative model of future hub cities. Over the past eighteen years, my team has continuously explored how to apply "the lowest technical threshold + extreme logical efficiency" to real business systems. Although I am not an urban planner and have not directly participated in airport construction, standing on-site, I can deeply feel that the future landscape of a city is slowly unfolding from strategic concepts, and we, as system inputters and providers of thought, are important annotations beyond the creators of the composition. Another highlight of this conference was the face-to-face communication with several heavyweight guests. From Charles Casuscelli, CEO of the Western Sydney Local Council, to Ian Manchester, Professor of Artificial Intelligence at the University of Sydney, and Terence Young, Director of DNATA's Asia-Pacific Cargo Division, as well as a speaker from the NEC delegation in Japan, their professionalism and openness made me realize that the mainstream discourse system in the West has begun to actively seek input from cross-cultural and cross-system practical experiences. I am also well aware that such platforms are not common for Chinese enterprises. What most people can access are media reports after the fact, open visits, or project completions, rather than entering the logical framework and strategic model of a project while it is still in the early stages of planning. Therefore, I particularly cherish this opportunity to serve as a speaker and regard this experience as a highly structurally valuable anchor point in my life. Today, in 2025, Western Sydney International Airport is about to be put into operation, and a core hub of a futuristic city is about to officially commence. Looking back at the meeting photos from four years ago, those ideas that only existed in slides, planning blueprints, and brainstorming sessions are now becoming a reality one by one. In this process, I did not participate in the construction of any bricks and tiles, but I witnessed the entire structure from the conception to its realization, and in my own way, I contributed a glimmer of light to the future information system of this city. This is not the end of a speech, but the starting point of a civil dialogue. Source: http://www.australianwinner.com/AuWinner/viewtopic.php?t=697063 |
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