Huawei Cloud focuses on AI collaboration at APAC Partner Conference

Huawei Cloud gathered more than 400 partners at its 2025 Asia Pacific Partner Conference to advance AI, cloud collaboration, and local solutions for shared business growth.

Huawei Cloud brought together more than 400 partners from over 10 countries for its 2025 Asia Pacific Partner Conference in Thailand. With AI development in the region at its highest, the conference focused on how cloud and AI technologies can help businesses grow together.

In her remarks, Jacqueline Shi, President of Huawei Cloud Global Marketing and Sales Service, spoke about Huawei Cloud's plan to support partners in the region. She said the company is building stronger AI cloud services to meet rising demand from sectors like government, finance, telecom, and Internet services.

Shi said Huawei Cloud is working closely with partners to develop use-case specific solutions. The goal is to help them grow by offering services tailored to local needs. Huawei Cloud also set up a competence center in Asia Pacific to provide hands-on support. That includes training, delivery help, and joint marketing.

Ken Kang, President of Huawei Cloud Global Ecosystem, stressed the importance of building a healthy AI ecosystem. He said the future of AI depends on close cooperation across the tech stack—from model building to deployment.

Dale Chen, Director of Partner Development at Huawei Cloud Asia Pacific, shared two key goals for the region. First, to go deeper into industries like finance and telecom, and build strong networks of developers. Second, to support sales growth through marketing, partner-driven go-to-market plans, technical help, and fair market conditions.

Huawei Cloud currently works with more than 45,000 partners. Its online marketplace, KooGallery, hosts over 12,000 solutions. Several partners at the event, including AIS, Orange Business, SCash Global, MFEC, and Silverlake, shared how they've worked with Huawei Cloud to deliver real-world results.

Joy Huang, Vice President of Huawei Cloud, took the stage to outline the company's technology focus. He spoke about how computing power is changing, pushing AI forward in five distinct stages. He said, "Today, I want to talk about how we can work together to accelerate intelligence and amplify success."

Huang pointed to recent advances in China, including robots that run marathons and driverless taxis, as signs of where things are headed.

He also cited Huawei's Cloud Computing 2030 report, which predicts that by 2030, AI will create most digital content and drive the majority of enterprise app development. Billions of smart devices are expected to be linked to the cloud.

Huang highlighted six areas where Huawei Cloud is focusing. These include:

"Huawei Cloud is ready to work with partners to build the Cloud Foundation for an Intelligent World," said Huang.

The company stated it will keep supporting its partners in finding local solutions and building shared success in the age of AI.