Huawei plans to set up a "joint innovation centre" with Telecom where experts from the local firm will look at the specific needs of New Zealand's market while the Chinese company's specialists will investigate what kind of technologies can satisfy those needs, Ren said.
Ren said he had also met with Labour Party leader David Shearer, and had told both him and Adams that creating a leading technology infrastructure would help New Zealand take advantage of its natural resources to lift economic activity.
"Given that New Zealand wants to take a lead versus other markets in the world by introducing new technologies, then definitely we support that aspiration," Ren said.
That meeting didn't stop Labour MP Phil Goff, Shearer's predecessor as leader, from criticising the government yesterday for letting Huawei set up a network in New Zealand.
Speaking yesterday in Parliament at the first reading of legislation relating to the country's intelligence agencies, Goff said "maybe the government should be asking itself some questions about why, unlike Australia and the United States, it has accepted Huawei into New Zealand, when that in itself is regarded by two of the countries we work closely with as being a security risk."
The regulatory impact statement for the Government Communications Security Bureau Act Review, prepared by the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet, singled out cyber-security risks as one of the most dynamic parts in the intelligence sector. The report put the cost of cyber-crime to New Zealanders at $625 million over the past 12 months.
Huawei's Ren said New Zealand should be looking to the Nordic nations and Singapore as an international benchmark as to how it rates, though it is "among the first wave of countries in establishing telecommunications infrastructure."
Because of New Zealand's uneven population distribution, Ren said in his opinion "the most advanced technologies should be deployed starting from higher value areas and regions, so that it can reduce the capital expenses and also the operating expenses."
The pending government auction of 700 megahertz radio spectrum which is coming from after the television digital switchover will be "very cost efficient for rural coverage" as the roll-out of technology expands, he said.