The power of collaboration for the digital innovations of Smart Cities
And five examples of effective public private partnerships for you. Read More
Many cities around the world benefit from innovation and digitization strategies. Smart Cities initiatives provide the catalyst for urban communities to become more resilient and sustainable, affording economic efficiencies, environmental innovations, enhanced public security, smarter mobility, fresh economic activity and 21st-century jobs. Cities carry the brunt of modern day challenges (traffic congestion, air quality), but they also serve as a natural cradle to talent, jobs and innovations. Many modern cities are at the center of “geographies of innovation”; the wide distribution of residents in multi-jurisdictional regions surrounding a historical and densely populated city center.
Imperative to a successful wholesale smart strategy for all, is to take innovations beyond the city centers, facilitate larger regions and cater the digital enhancement of our communities, large or small. To not do so implies condoning a digital divide, with urban centers affording the riches of digital innovations, and non-urban communities falsely remaining under the impression that they are online. Modern jobs are emerging in city centers and non-urban communities are hosting jobs of the 20th century only.
Smart city strategies can become successful only if they prove sufficiently inclusive. Smart region strategies pave the way for such digital inclusion. By seeing smaller and larger communities collaborate, procure, set innovation agendas, share know-how, create economies of scale and aggregate demand, digital inclusion can be addressed effectively, with smaller communities benefiting from the same digital innovations large cities typically already enjoy. As we collectively enter the next chapter of digital evolution, we must leave no person behind. Smart region strategies help us achieve that goal.
Power of collaboration
Large cities are better positioned to deal with digitalization than their smaller peers. They have more resources and know how to articulate and implement smart strategies. In some jurisdictions, such as at the state level in the United States, regional authorities can leverage an expanded set of resources and instruments on which municipalities, large and small, may depend. Smart region strategies facilitate the collaboration of larger cities, smaller municipalities and regional authorities; allowing for a comprehensive sharing of knowledge and resources.
For instance, collaboration on a regional level ensures smaller communities can tap into a larger body of knowledge relevant to digitalization that typically involves technology architectures, data management, cybersecurity and regulations. Regional collaboration also allows for economies of scale by establishing joint procurement schemes or, at a minimum, coordinate individual procurement procedures. Regional collaboration in procurement also allows for an effective avoidance of pitfalls, such as unwantedly getting tied to proprietary solutions, or losing data ownership.
Five examples of effective public-private collaboration
Smart community strategies succeed by means of effective public-private collaboration. Effective public-private collaboration does not equal the traditional public-private partnership which may typically represent an ineffective approach when managing dynamic innovation agendas. Effective collaboration, however, entails each side doing what it does best, and holding the other accountable for doing exactly that. Such collaboration is difficult to materialize when the endeavor is too small and efforts are geographically fragmented. Regional collaboration allows not only for larger economies of scale, it also helps to stipulate more clearly what is expected from each party in the partnership.
For example, 20 municipalities collaborating on a shared definition of what constitutes “interoperability” or “open data” is likely to ensure a higher degree of compliance and adherence of private sector suppliers to such definitions. Further, a regional scope enhances the interest of private sector to invest, as the investments (whether in cash, know-how or staffing) can be understood to result in a larger, regional ROI.
1. Phoenix, Arizona
In the greater Phoenix region, the Institute of Digital Progress (iDP) has coordinated the collaboration of multiple municipalities and authorities, as well as private sector partners, including Uber, Intel and Cisco, further supported by Arizona State University, to address mobility and traffic congestions collectively. This team of partners has won a multi-million dollar Advanced Transportation And Congestion Management Technologies Deployment grant in the process.
2. Brescia, Italy
In Italy, the province of Brescia has managed to group 28 small municipalities in a single PPP initiative aimed at driving energy efficiencies, resulting in a “smart light” transition on 23,000 light poles, carrying an economic value of around $52 million. The savings generated are being reinvested in an expansion of the light transition to encompass full coverage in the 28 territories, with the public IoT digital infrastructure given in concession to a private operator.
3. Kansas City, Missouri
Kansas City, Missouri, can pride itself on having forged a public-private partnership that has resulted in the development of the 54 most connected blocks in North America. Kansas City gets great service for its citizens while obtaining data analytics capabilities that allow the city to augment its operations. The services are being scaled regionally.
4. Copenhagen, Denmark
In Denmark, Gate21 leads the way in facilitating the collaboration of municipalities and private sector counterparts in the capital region of Copenhagen as they embrace digitalization and innovation strategies, effectively proceeding with their energy transition to become carbon neutral by 2030.
5. Flanders, Belgium
In Belgium, the “Smart Flanders” program supports 13 central cities in the Flanders region in their development into smart cities, including the port city of Antwerp. Smart Flanders does this by focusing on real-time open data and shared reference models and aims to stimulate cooperation between cities and actors from the quadruple helix. Leveraging its “learning by doing” approach, Smart Flanders focuses on making data as accessible as possible, with a view to maximum reuse as a basis for smarter services and applications.
Digital doesn’t stop at city limits
Data does not have a natural habit of hitting the brakes when it reaches geographical city limits. Digital innovations can be held back from extending beyond city limits, however; confined by the ways they have been managed, procured or deployed. But many digital innovations only make sense when scaled well beyond city limits.
For instance, preparing our joint futures for smart mobility and automated vehicles requires the joint creation of standards, joint regulations and joint experimentation. New road to vehicle communications will mature only if they are facilitated to scale. And only if they scale can they evolve to become standards. And without standards, we are unlikely to achieve automated mobility at reasonable scale. In short, Smart Cities are rendered immobile, if mobility isn’t addressed on a regional level.
To a large extent, the same applies to smart energy grids; the level of success and impact get directly determined by scale, interoperability, effective ecosystems of partners collaborating, and an effective framework of rules and regulations. Cities are challenged to meet such criteria by acting alone. Public security is better served by data analytics getting organized across jurisdictions, across the silos of judiciary organizations. And water management, whether to address drought or the exact opposite, can be achieved reasonably well only by taking on a smart region approach. In this lies an interesting paradox.
Smart Region Strategies do not simply enable a collective of smaller communities. They enable larger communities as well. Without placing Smart City endeavors in a geographically larger, regional context, many Smart City initiatives end up severely limited in impact and relevance to the point they get rendered not-so-smart. In short, Smart Region Strategies empower Smart Cities.
Smart region as a service
Smart City initiatives of the recent past have relied heavily on big hardware deployments enabled by sizable capex investments. Many smaller communities found themselves insufficiently equipped to deal with such endeavors, lacking know-how, rudimentary infrastructures and cash to take similar innovations to their own constituents. Digitization strategies of a more evolved kind, however, are data and cloud-driven. While rudimentary broadband infrastructure remains a prerequisite, ever more smart city services can be provided and procured as-a-service. For example, smart parking and even outdoor light can be brought to you as a service, while the insights delivered through data analytics on top of such services can come as an intelligent service also.
This trend vastly enhances the ability to plan, procure, deploy and leverage smart city solutions seamlessly and securely, without the capex investment extravaganzas of the past. Technology know-how becomes less of a cornerstone requirement as part of procurement procedures, while a deep understanding and well-articulated set of expectations of service levels and key performance indicators will determine success at large. This lowers the threshold for smaller communities to enter the smart arena, with regional collaboration serving as a key enabler for collective action.
Dominic Papa, Raffaele Gareri and Poul Erik Lauridsen also contributed to this story.