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Smart Cities by the numbers Smart City Summit Scottsdale, AZ September 28, 2017 Philip Bane, Managing Director

Philip bane smart city

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Smart Cities by the numbers

Smart City SummitScottsdale, AZSeptember 28, 2017

Philip Bane, Managing Director

4important

words

1. Impactful

2. Integrated

3. Inclusive

4. Infrastructure

Agenda

Drivers of smart cities

Elements of smart cities

Steps towards a smart city

Ways to get help

World population

1900 1.7B

1950 3.5B

Today 7.5B

2050 9.7B

Needed for 2050

Water +55%

Food +60%

Energy +80%

Urban population

1900 13%

1950 29%

Today 54%

2050 66%

EU 78%

US 82%

By 2050, we will add 2.5B new urban residents

Urban population

Every month, urban population grows by 5M

… every month for the next 30 years

Build the equivalent of Chicago…

Today – 2.5B Connected Devices2020 – 10B Connected Devices

Urban poverty

Living in slums

1990 650M

Today 1B

D+2017 grade for American

infrastructure (ASCE)

75%will need to be renovated

or replaced by 2030

It’s not just a trend, it’s a race

A race for economic development

A race for connected lifestyle

A race for better governmentA race for better government

A race to help the disadvantaged

A race to improve well-being

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

Agenda

Drivers of smart cities

Elements of smart cities

Steps towards a smart city

Ways to get help

Transforming every aspect of urban life

4 aspects of a smart city

Collect

1Communicate

2Compute

3

z z

Control

4

A FitBit for the city

Streets tell us if they are congested

3 kinds

of applications

Compute:

1. Situational awareness

Descriptive

2. Predictive analytics

Predictive

3. Real-time optimization

Prescriptive

SMART STREET LIGHTS

3 common on-ramps

SMART GRID SMART BUILDINGS

Agenda

Drivers of smart cities

Elements of smart cities

Steps towards a smart city

Ways to get help

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?

Study great examples

Agenda

Drivers of smart cities

Elements of smart cities

Steps towards a smart city

Ways to get help

The Smart Cities Council is here to

help you navigate this transformation

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?

Third Edition - Washington DC October 3-5, 2017

LIVABILITY

CleanSafe

HealthyVibrantMobility

Problem: time and cost to delivery of benefits

WORKABILITY

CompetitiveConnected

DigitalJobs

Prosperous

SUSTAINABILITY

RenewablesResilient

RegenerativeCarbon Neutral

Water

Solution: ReadinessTM Program

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

Transportationis transforming

Significant national and regional publicity

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

4important

words

1. Impactful

2. Integrated

3. Inclusive

4. Infrastructure

It’s not just a trend, it’s a race

Thank You!