According to Leong, the two companies also intend to collaborate on big-data exchanges and analysis to provide smart lighting solutions to Chinese customers.
"The future for the LED industry relies on an integration of intelligent management, Internet, terminals and online applications.. It will greatly improve people's lives and create new business values," Leong said.
The annual lighting event in Guangzhou saw increased participation of nearly 3,000 domestic and foreign manufacturers.
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Another international lighting giant GE Lighting said it is working with visual light communications startup Byte-Light to create networked light fixtures that can communicate with smartphones using light and Bluetooth.
Chinese manufacturers are also looking for new technology to boost their presence in the market.
Zhao Nengxiang, assistant general manager of Guangdong SOK Electrical Appliance Co Ltd, said the company's new solutions for the LED management system would help boost business.
"We are promoting a new way for the lighting industry. We believe the future business growth will depend on smart solutions for LED products," Zhao told China Daily.
In a move to promote efficient and clean use of energy, China has banned the use of 650 million incandescent light bulbs annually in the past five years, sources with the National Development and Reform Commission, the nation's top planner, said.
The country also decided not to allow the import and sale of 60-watt or above bulbs as of October this year.
By the end of 2015, China expects LED products to account for 30 percent of the domestic lighting, three times more than the present level, the NDRC sources said.