Abstract
RFID Market Size in China
For the first time, China has become the world' s largest market for RFID by
value. In 2007 the spend on RFID in East Asia will be $2.7 billion of $4.96
billion spent globally. The majority of this - $1.9 billion is just in China.
This is because of a peak in delivery of national identification cards in
China prior to the 2008 Olympics. About $1.65 billion is being spent on 300
million of these cards plus their associated systems being delivered in 2007
out of a project commitment of $6 billion, the largest of any RFID project in
the world. Add to this $0.25 billion in other RFID tags and their systems,
most of this related to transport, cash replacement and secure access cards,
and the resulting $1.9 billion is 38% by value of the $4.96 billion global
market for RFID cards and systems in 2007.
However, as the deliveries of the national ID card saturate, China will sink
below the US and probably Japan in value of its RFID market but that market
will nonetheless be growing very fast. Within ten years it will more than
compensate for the drop in delivery of national ID cards, buoyant sectors
including animal tagging, transport, cash replacement cards, secure access,
manufacturing, military and supply chain applications. Some of the RFID
potential in China is shown in the table below.
RFID suppliers in China
The leading 12 RFID companies account for $722 million of the Chinese RFID
market size in 2007, 36.8% of the total $1960 million RFID market in China.
IDTechEx finds that the top 8 RFID operations in China were all contractors of
the national ID card scheme. Huahong Group comprises two major subsidiaries:
chip manufacturer Huahong NEC and chip designer Huahong IC. Both companies
were appointed as supplier for national ID card project. Likewise, Datang
Microelectronics received orders for both chip design and chip module
encapsulation. SMIC is a top 10 semiconductor foundry in the world. Datang and
Eastcom Peace were among the top 8 smart card manufacturers in the world.
200 other local and foreign suppliers share the remaining $1238 million market
value. These suppliers include foreign chip suppliers who had played a major
part in RFID applications in China. For example, NXP supplied chips for the
Beijing public transit cards and campus cards, and Inside Contactless won the
Ministry of Communication order for the 7 million transportation certificate,
etc. Other chip suppliers active in Chinese market include Texas Instruments,
STMicroelectronics, lnfineon, EM Microelectronics, Atmel, etc.
It also includes numerous local interrogator suppliers and system integrators
for contactless smart card rollouts in their respective cities, such as
national ID cards schemes and public transit cards. For example, Shanghai
Public Transport Card Co (SPTCC) was founded in 1999 by local government,
major transportation companies, and technology suppliers located in the city.
The sole purpose of this company is to implement and coordinate the public
transport card project. State-owned companies of similar structure and
function had been established in Beijing, Guangzhou, and most of the other 80
cities with transit card schemes ongoing. Annual sales revenues of these
companies vary from several million dollars to tens of thousands.
Thoroughly researched report with new information
This report is the summation of extensive new research by IDTechEx analysts
including Chinese native Ning Xiao. Many companies in China were visited and
interviewed to obtain this information, which is not available elsewhere.
The 315 page report covers over 150 companies developing RFID in China, actual
and potential sales, successes and impediments, standards, frequencies and 92
case studies. This is your complete guide to RFID in China, giving an
unprecedented level of insight into what is really happening.