Why the Internet of Things will be at the heart of smart city transformation

This audio was created using Microsoft Azure Speech Services

The smart cities movement is absolutely trying to change our world for the better. Great visionary goals are being set at both at city and national level—like India announcing its intention to create 100 smart cities or via the creation of organisations like the UK’s Future Cities Catapult.

Around the globe, countries and cities are exploring how technology can make urban environments cleaner, healthier and more pleasant in which to live. We know that technology cannot resolve every city challenge, nor should we expect it to do so. Yet, if applied well, technology can help solve pressing needs or meet aspirations, sustainably delivering improved quality of life, more prosperity and efficiency.

The IoT will help speed smart city development

A great many people, including myself, are excited about the possibilities of bringing technology into cities to see this value realised. The deployment of technology is an essential part of the urban transformation concept which we been calling the smart city.

Industry analysts have embraced the smart city concept and are predicting huge growth in the levels of spending and of the number of devices installed along the way (e.g. Navigant Research, IDC & Gartner), and this has considerably fuelled the expectations of the technology industry and cities.

Smart cities often comprise many different projects, typically smart energy, smart water, smart transport, smart waste, e-Government and many others. Yet as with many analyst projections, growth and spending have been lagging behind the vast levels forecast (although it’s still growing strongly).

In tandem, there is a lot of discussion about the Internet of Things (IoT). The IoT represents a much broader range of applications than in just cities, but the convergence of these trends creates the most likely path towards smart and technology enabled cities.

With an overall vision set out by a city’s leaders, groups working on tactical solutions to specific issues are increasingly deploying IoT solutions to deliver projects. This is a less complicated means of delivering solutions, which is faster, easier and less frightening. What’s more, we are already seeing it working.

Adopting an IoT approach has been significantly boosted by the rapid reduction both in the cost of connectivity and data transmission, as well as the cost and power requirements of sensors. Many IoT projects rely on connecting large numbers of sensors, through a system to each report data.

At its most basic, managing city infrastructure is about sensing and actuating. The IoT adds scale and intelligence. For example, sensors can alert where and when a trash can needs emptying so it can be dealt with in a timely and cost-effective manner. The IoT can also coordinate this with recycling/ sorting centers to further reduce costs and optimize resources.

Solving the challenges, which emerge when large numbers of people and businesses inhabit the same space, is not a luxury; it’s a necessity. IoT deployment represents a transformation now, but successful projects will simply become the new business as usual. Ten years ago e-Government was a big deal; today it’s just how we do things. The same thing is happening with the smart city — soon we will drop the “smart” and simply focus on the “city”.

The utopia that I and many others aspire to will see IoT projects joined together across cities, from city to city, and possibly across national boundaries, optimizing efficiency and cost savings whilst maximising benefits to citizens and businesses. Right now only a very few courageous municipalities such as Barcelona and Dubai dare to aim so high, but as others take even baby steps through discrete projects the process of transformation can only continue to gain momentum.

Thank you for reading, and please visit our smart cities website for more information on Schneider Electric’s solutions.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Conversation

  • RashmiRajan

    10 years ago

    nice post

  • Maria Serrano

    10 years ago

    Fully agree on the possibilities for smart cities in future, thanks to IoT, Cloud, Mobile, M2M and other emerging technologies.
    Moreover, I beleive that city management changes are embebed in the pushing social spring we are already living: a millenium generation, crowdsourcing, transparency ethics, sustainability awareness, new funding and business models, etc.
    Things are going to happen (they are already happening): the issue is if your city is prepared to adapt or will remain (once again) stuck in the past and fail !

  • Great article . Love to see happening this

  • Vietvinh Nguyen

    9 years ago

    I am managing to use wifi modules ( such as cheap ESP8266) with micro-controller modules (STM32) to start up a small interconnected network within my house to connect appliances together. This will be my first IoT application. Thanks for the article that give strength to develop a cherished dream I had before.

Comments are closed.