Philip bane smart city
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Transcript of Philip bane smart city
Smart Cities by the numbers
Smart City SummitScottsdale, AZSeptember 28, 2017
Philip Bane, Managing Director
… every month for the next 30 years
Build the equivalent of Chicago…
Today – 2.5B Connected Devices2020 – 10B Connected Devices
Dubai“Smartest city on earth”
Some cities are already pulling ahead…
Singapore“Smart nation”
New YorkOneNYC
Unprecedented pace
China is # 1 Global market for On-Demand-transportation
Measured by bike and car trip-volume
China On-Demand Bike Sharing Complements On-Demand Cars at 75% shorter trip distance and 80% lower cost per KM
Shenzhen On-Demand Bike Sharing Study
2.66M daily trips
5 Trips per available bike per day
50% of trips are last mile connection to public transport
100K Tons CO2 emission reduction
95% positive response
Kleiner Perkins Internet
Trends 2017
On Demand Car Share
(Didi)
On-Demand Bike Share
(Mobike / Ofo)
Avg. Trip Distance 8 Km 2 KM
Avg. Trip Cost 3 USD .15 USD
Cost per Km .37 USD .07 USD
Daimler – Beijing Electric VehicleVolkswagen – Anhui Jianghuai Auto
LIVABILITY
CleanSafe
HealthyVibrantMobility
Best Indicator of benefits – “well-being”
WORKABILITY
CompetitiveConnected
DigitalJobs
Prosperous
SUSTAINABILITY
RenewablesResilient
RegenerativeCarbon Neutral
Water
3 kinds
of applications
Compute:
1. Situational awareness
Descriptive
2. Predictive analytics
Predictive
3. Real-time optimization
Prescriptive
5key challenges
Technology – What should we do?
Greatest confusion: How to do it cross-cutting
Great fears: Privacy and cybersecurity
Financing – How do we pay for it?
Growing consensus around public/private partnerships
Policy – How do we regulate it?
Unleash the opportunities while safeguarding citizens
Stakeholder engagement – How partner?
Must have early engagement
Plan with all so you can build for all
Governance – How do we organize?
Who leads? Who owns and manages?
How do we break down the silos?
1. Assemble your team
Find a champion
Include all departments
Include proxies for all key stakeholder groups
Consider regional, state and national partners
2. Create your vision
Strategy
Consult your long-term plan
Consult your stakeholders
Agree on core goals and long-term direction
4 steps to smart city transformation
3. Create your action plan
Tactics and priorities
Consult with experts
Explore the possible
Make your wish lists
Look for synergies
Set your priorities
4. Implement your plan
Build your project roadmap
Deploy in stages
Report your progress
Refresh your plan and your roadmap
4 steps to smart city transformation
Key stakeholders
Residents
Utilities
Business
Universities
Nearby cities
Largest
employers
Authorities - port,
transit, housing
Chambers
County
State
Federal
Disadvantaged• Low-income
• Handicapped
• Elderly
• Homeless
• Underserved
neighborhoods
Key Stakeholders
Edison Electric Institute as new Partner
EEIIn all 50 states
Servicing over 220 million people
Arizona
Arizona Public Service Company
Tucson Electric Power
Unisource
Are there utilities in the room?
Global Industry coalition
Accelerating progress by advising and educating cities
Joining forces to help communities
120+ member and advisor organizations employing…
1.5 million+ people generating…
$2.7 trillion+ in annual revenues that have worked on…
10,000+ smart city projects past and present
69,900,000population of the North American metropolitan regions where we are holding workshops this year
32,320,000 population of India metropolitan regions where we held workshops in 2017
810,000 population of Australian metropolitan regions where we held workshops in 2017
The Smart Cities Readiness Guide
The first-ever collaborative, vendor-
neutral framework for a smart city
World’s largest collection
of smart city tools, resources, case studies
at SmartCitiesCouncil.com
The Compassionate Cities Program
“Innovate to include”
Meetings and workshops
Over 50 workshops in past three (3) year - with city decision makers (including North America, Europe, Gulf States, India, China)
HOW does the Council help cities?
LIVABILITY
CleanSafe
HealthyVibrantMobility
Problem: time and cost to delivery of benefits
WORKABILITY
CompetitiveConnected
DigitalJobs
Prosperous
SUSTAINABILITY
RenewablesResilient
RegenerativeCarbon Neutral
Water
2017 Challenge Grant Process
Educate Qualify EngageInteractive
applicatio
n
170
40
10
5
69
million
• Philadelphia issued Smart City RFP 4 months after being named a winner• Orlando has made a public commitment to 100% renewable generation• All winner (Austin, Orlando, Philadelphia, Indianapolis and Miami) have moved forward with planning and action
Cities Slow to
Act
2017 Readiness Program
Winners5 winners: Austin, Indianapolis, Miami, Orlando, Philadelphia
Also delivered other Readiness Workshops for Illinois, Atlanta, San Antonio, Dallas, others
Strong participation
100–150 stakeholders15–20 Partners
Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer addresses the workshop
“This is just a quick note to thank you for the thought
provoking, energetic Smart Cities Readiness Workshop
today in Orlando. It was great to hear and learn from the
experts while getting our collective creativity flowing. It
feels like we have more clarity on our roadmap...”
Christopher Cairns, PE, PTOE
Division Manager, Transportation Engineering
City of Orlando
To help baseline participants’
understanding of the diverse areas of
knowledge we built a wall of
information addressing the following
Smart State / Smart City themes:
• General Context
• US Context
• State Context
• Market Evolution
• Innovation Units
• Smart Initiatives
• Benchmarking
• Collaboration
• Data / Platforms / Control Centers
• New Business Models
• Innovation & Re-Thinking
We drew on examples from the state,
the US and global projects, to provide
a snapshot of 59 different ideas to
stimulate thinking and to provide
resource for the Smart States Vision
and Roadmap workshop.
The Illinois Knowledge Wall
45
“Illinois has been recognized as the
first-mover in Smarter State work in the country... Jesse
Berst and the Smart Cities Council have played a special
role in getting us to this point.”
Hardik Bhatt,
Chief Digital Officer & Acting
Secretary,
Innovation & Technology
State of Illinois
Application process alone helped cities
Application qualifies cities
Requires top-down support
Identifies decision makers
Identifies issues of most importance
Assembles stakeholders
Application “coaches” cities
Questions link back to Readiness Guide and Partner case studies
Value for all entrants, not just winners
“It was a forcing function to get us to collaborate and set priorities”
“Thanks to the application, we found out about several projects that were siloed in departments”
Interesting facts:• Illinois issued Smart Street
Light RFP• Philadelphia issued Smart
City Roadmap RFP
Please help us
help you –Phoenix!
2018 Readiness Challenge grants
U.S., Canada, Mexico
Cities, counties, provinces, regional authorities
Apply online, due Nov. 10http://smartcitiescouncil.com/scc-2018-readiness-challenge-info
5 winners
Impactful, integrated, inclusive
Readiness Workshop in your town
Mentoring before and after
Free products & services
More helpfor more cities
Application preparation seminar
Smart Cities Week for all applicants
Sponsors invited to present and help coach
Readiness Workshop in winning cities
Help them create their Action Plans
Upgraded curriculum with more visibility for sponsors
Ongoing mentoring
Quarterly calls, sponsors invited to participate
Promote their cities
Winners announced at U.S. Conference of Mayors, articles, speaking slots at national and international events, travel scholarships