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The document discusses smart cities and defines them as developed urban areas that create sustainable economic development and good quality of life through investments in infrastructure, technology, and citizen engagement. It provides examples of smart city concepts like smart buildings, weather monitoring, and farming and discusses technologies involved like IoT, cloud computing, and big data. The document also outlines standards organizations working on smart city standards and some implementations of smart cities around the world.
Smart city -Opportunity to Indian Telecom Operator Satish Chavan
The document discusses India's Smart Cities Mission to develop 100 cities across the country. It provides definitions of smart cities from various organizations and outlines some key aspects of smart cities like smart transportation, traffic management, health, education, governance, and the role of telecom as the backbone to connect various systems and technologies. It also lists the first 20 cities selected for development under the mission.
IRJET- Internet of Things Technologies for Future of Smart Cities: Artificial...IRJET Journal
This document discusses the role of Internet of Things (IoT) technologies in enabling smart cities. It describes how IoT allows objects to be connected to the internet and exchange data. This data can then be analyzed to improve services and efficiency in areas like transportation, waste management, and environmental monitoring. The document also outlines some challenges to the large-scale adoption of IoT in cities, such as security, lack of standards, and ensuring real-time solutions. It argues that combining IoT with artificial intelligence can help address issues like analyzing large volumes of data and automatically adjusting systems in response.
Assessing the Impacts and Developing Adaptation Strategies Using Application ...Global Risk Forum GRFDavos
The document summarizes a training session on assessing impacts of and developing adaptation strategies for climate change using electronic governance and information and communication technologies (ICTs). The session objectives are to identify critical parameters for e-governance in rural development, disseminate information for planning using ICTs, and develop an e-governance model. Models from India are presented that use ICTs like wireless networks and hub centers to connect rural communities and provide services like education, healthcare and agriculture support.
The Smart City concept operates in a complex urban environment, incorporating several complex systems of infrastructure, human behavior, technology, social and political structures and the economy. A Smart City provides an intelligent way to manage components such as transport, health, energy, education and the environment.
The world is moving forward at a fast hop, and the credit goes to ever growing technology. One such idea is IOT Internet of things with which automation is no longer a virtual reality. The Internet of Things will seamlessly incorporate a large number of different and heterogeneous end systems, while providing open access to selected subsets of data for the development of an overabundance of digital services. Building a wide ranging architecture for IoT is required because of the extremely large variety of devices but it is a very complex task, link layer technologies, and services that may be involved in such a system. In this paper we emphasis specifically to an urban IoT systems that, while still being quite a broad category, are characterized by their specific application domain. Urban IoTs, in fact, are designed to support the Smart City vision, which aims at take advantage of the most advanced communication technologies to support added value services for the administration of the city and for the citizens. Sunitha C | Asha Priya B | Lavanya S ""Need of Internet of Things for Smart Cities"" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-3 | Issue-4 , June 2019, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd23597.pdf
Paper URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/computer-science/world-wide-web/23597/need-of-internet-of-things-for-smart-cities/sunitha-c
Smart cities are no longer a dream of tomorrow but becoming an increasingly popular option for enhancing the sustainability of major metropolitan areas throughout the world.Visit https://goo.gl/k9c2eo for more information.
Smart City, Internet de las cosas al servicio de los ciudadanos - Jorge GuerraLab San Isidro
The document discusses smart cities and defines them as developed urban areas that create sustainable economic development and good quality of life through investments in infrastructure, technology, and citizen engagement. It provides examples of smart city concepts like smart buildings, weather monitoring, and farming and discusses technologies involved like IoT, cloud computing, and big data. The document also outlines standards organizations working on smart city standards and some implementations of smart cities around the world.
Smart city -Opportunity to Indian Telecom Operator Satish Chavan
The document discusses India's Smart Cities Mission to develop 100 cities across the country. It provides definitions of smart cities from various organizations and outlines some key aspects of smart cities like smart transportation, traffic management, health, education, governance, and the role of telecom as the backbone to connect various systems and technologies. It also lists the first 20 cities selected for development under the mission.
IRJET- Internet of Things Technologies for Future of Smart Cities: Artificial...IRJET Journal
This document discusses the role of Internet of Things (IoT) technologies in enabling smart cities. It describes how IoT allows objects to be connected to the internet and exchange data. This data can then be analyzed to improve services and efficiency in areas like transportation, waste management, and environmental monitoring. The document also outlines some challenges to the large-scale adoption of IoT in cities, such as security, lack of standards, and ensuring real-time solutions. It argues that combining IoT with artificial intelligence can help address issues like analyzing large volumes of data and automatically adjusting systems in response.
Assessing the Impacts and Developing Adaptation Strategies Using Application ...Global Risk Forum GRFDavos
The document summarizes a training session on assessing impacts of and developing adaptation strategies for climate change using electronic governance and information and communication technologies (ICTs). The session objectives are to identify critical parameters for e-governance in rural development, disseminate information for planning using ICTs, and develop an e-governance model. Models from India are presented that use ICTs like wireless networks and hub centers to connect rural communities and provide services like education, healthcare and agriculture support.
The Smart City concept operates in a complex urban environment, incorporating several complex systems of infrastructure, human behavior, technology, social and political structures and the economy. A Smart City provides an intelligent way to manage components such as transport, health, energy, education and the environment.
The world is moving forward at a fast hop, and the credit goes to ever growing technology. One such idea is IOT Internet of things with which automation is no longer a virtual reality. The Internet of Things will seamlessly incorporate a large number of different and heterogeneous end systems, while providing open access to selected subsets of data for the development of an overabundance of digital services. Building a wide ranging architecture for IoT is required because of the extremely large variety of devices but it is a very complex task, link layer technologies, and services that may be involved in such a system. In this paper we emphasis specifically to an urban IoT systems that, while still being quite a broad category, are characterized by their specific application domain. Urban IoTs, in fact, are designed to support the Smart City vision, which aims at take advantage of the most advanced communication technologies to support added value services for the administration of the city and for the citizens. Sunitha C | Asha Priya B | Lavanya S ""Need of Internet of Things for Smart Cities"" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-3 | Issue-4 , June 2019, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd23597.pdf
Paper URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/computer-science/world-wide-web/23597/need-of-internet-of-things-for-smart-cities/sunitha-c
Smart cities are no longer a dream of tomorrow but becoming an increasingly popular option for enhancing the sustainability of major metropolitan areas throughout the world.Visit https://goo.gl/k9c2eo for more information.
Day 2 Chang-Hai Liu - China Telecom - Smart CityAdrian Hall
A smart city uses digital technologies to enhance
performance and well-being, to reduce costs and
resource consumption, and to engage more effectively
and actively with its citizens.
Smart cities aim to use information and communication technologies to improve efficiency and sustainability in urban areas while reducing costs. Sensors around the city monitor various factors and transmit data to authorities to facilitate better planning. Technologies used include CCTV, traffic sensors, and crime prediction software. At the proposed GIFT City in Gujarat, a smart waste management system uses underground pipes and plasma incineration to efficiently dispose of waste and generate power. The smart city development models include retrofitting existing areas, redeveloping areas over 50 acres, and greenfield development on over 250 acres of vacant land.
The Fascinating Story Of The Rise of IoT in smart cities 2023 | CIO Women Mag...CIOWomenMagazine
Since 1950, the number of people living in cities has almost doubled, rising from 751 million in 1950 to 4.2 billion in 2018. It presents several issues in managing densely populated metropolitan regions. Making the Rise of IoT in smart cities is the answer.
According to the McKinsey Global Institute’s extensive study of global cities:
- 80% of global GDP is generated in cities with
- 50% in the 380 major cities of the developed world
- 10% in the largest 220 cities of the developing world.
Some 235 million households earning more than $20,000 will live in the emerging economy cities = growth of a global urban middle class = > high expectations of public services and the quality of the urban infrastructure and environment.
The document discusses recent trends in IoT and sustainability. It covers how IoT can help address challenges facing cities, including growing urban populations and the need for resilient infrastructure. Specific applications of IoT discussed include smart lighting, water monitoring, and expanding internet access. Goals for 2030 include improving infrastructure, making cities sustainable, and increasing access to technology. The document then outlines how IoT can help with issues like transportation, pollution monitoring, and disaster management for smart cities. It provides examples of IoT projects in Visakhapatnam, India and discusses integrating different systems to realize the smart city vision.
The document provides an overview of the Internet of Things (IoT). It defines IoT as the network of physical devices embedded with electronics, software, sensors and connectivity that allows these devices to collect and exchange data. It describes how IoT devices can be remotely monitored and controlled via existing network infrastructure. The document also outlines several key components of IoT including hardware, software, communication technologies, applications in different industries, and major players. It provides examples of large-scale IoT deployments and a glossary of common IoT terms.
The document discusses smart cities, defining them as cities that use information and communication technologies to be more efficient, manage resources better, and improve citizens' quality of life. It describes key factors in smart city development like new technologies, open innovation, and technical architecture. It also outlines examples of smart city initiatives and applications around the world and how 5G can further enable smart cities.
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Third seminary realized at PET-MA group, and the first one in english version (instead of portuguese). Speech about Smart Cities, IoT - and specially what is behind of the marketing involved into these topics.
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The document discusses smart cities and India's Smart Cities Mission. It provides context on smart cities as urban developments that integrate technology solutions to manage city assets. It then summarizes India's Smart Cities Mission which aims to develop 100 cities making them citizen-friendly and sustainable. Key features of smart cities discussed include smart parking, traffic management, waste management, and smart city management. The document also reviews smart city budgets, top smart cities, and challenges in developing smart cities.
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How smart street lights accelerate the transformation of smart cities - C&T R...Antenna Manufacturer Coco
Smart street lights are an important part of a smart city. It uses urban sensors, power line carrier/Zigbee communication technology and wireless GPRS/CDMA communication technology to connect street lights in the city to form an Internet of Things, enabling remote centralized control and management of street lights, based on traffic flow, time and weather. Condition setting scheme such as situation.
IRJET-The Internet of Things Applications for Challenges and Related Future T...IRJET Journal
The document discusses the Internet of Things (IoT), including its applications, characteristics, and future challenges. Some key points:
1) The IoT allows objects to be connected and exchange information over the Internet. This enables applications in areas like smart homes, cities, transportation, energy, and healthcare.
2) Examples of IoT applications discussed are smart cities, smart homes/buildings, and smart energy grids. These allow for improved infrastructure, transportation, energy monitoring and more.
3) Characteristics of the IoT include interconnectivity, heterogeneity, dynamic changes, enormous scale, safety, and connectivity. Everything can be connected through different networks and protocols.
This document discusses the growth of the Internet of Things (IoT) market and opportunities for smart cities. It notes that by 2020 there will be over 34 billion IoT devices connected, and that the IoT market is expected to generate trillions in spending between 2015-2020. Various industries and environments that can benefit from IoT solutions are described, including manufacturing, transportation, infrastructure, and more. The document advocates for using citizen-generated data and crowdsourcing to help cities better understand issues and optimize resources. Smartphone sensors and mobile applications are presented as ways to empower citizens to actively contribute data for smart city initiatives.
The document provides an overview of Internet of Things (IoT) in the development of smart cities. It discusses key concepts of IoT such as connectivity of devices, communication protocols, and data management challenges. The document also outlines several applications of IoT in smart cities including smart energy grids, transportation, healthcare, infrastructure, and environmental monitoring. It proposes a framework for distributed data processing and privacy preservation in IoT using techniques like data minimization, access control, and encryption.
Smart city can be understood as a city IT project. But City IT is quite different from office IT. This slide explains difference between City and Office IT and shows ways to build a smart city successfully based on experiences from Korea and Seoul in particular.
Day 2 Chang-Hai Liu - China Telecom - Smart CityAdrian Hall
A smart city uses digital technologies to enhance
performance and well-being, to reduce costs and
resource consumption, and to engage more effectively
and actively with its citizens.
Smart cities aim to use information and communication technologies to improve efficiency and sustainability in urban areas while reducing costs. Sensors around the city monitor various factors and transmit data to authorities to facilitate better planning. Technologies used include CCTV, traffic sensors, and crime prediction software. At the proposed GIFT City in Gujarat, a smart waste management system uses underground pipes and plasma incineration to efficiently dispose of waste and generate power. The smart city development models include retrofitting existing areas, redeveloping areas over 50 acres, and greenfield development on over 250 acres of vacant land.
The Fascinating Story Of The Rise of IoT in smart cities 2023 | CIO Women Mag...CIOWomenMagazine
Since 1950, the number of people living in cities has almost doubled, rising from 751 million in 1950 to 4.2 billion in 2018. It presents several issues in managing densely populated metropolitan regions. Making the Rise of IoT in smart cities is the answer.
According to the McKinsey Global Institute’s extensive study of global cities:
- 80% of global GDP is generated in cities with
- 50% in the 380 major cities of the developed world
- 10% in the largest 220 cities of the developing world.
Some 235 million households earning more than $20,000 will live in the emerging economy cities = growth of a global urban middle class = > high expectations of public services and the quality of the urban infrastructure and environment.
The document discusses recent trends in IoT and sustainability. It covers how IoT can help address challenges facing cities, including growing urban populations and the need for resilient infrastructure. Specific applications of IoT discussed include smart lighting, water monitoring, and expanding internet access. Goals for 2030 include improving infrastructure, making cities sustainable, and increasing access to technology. The document then outlines how IoT can help with issues like transportation, pollution monitoring, and disaster management for smart cities. It provides examples of IoT projects in Visakhapatnam, India and discusses integrating different systems to realize the smart city vision.
The document provides an overview of the Internet of Things (IoT). It defines IoT as the network of physical devices embedded with electronics, software, sensors and connectivity that allows these devices to collect and exchange data. It describes how IoT devices can be remotely monitored and controlled via existing network infrastructure. The document also outlines several key components of IoT including hardware, software, communication technologies, applications in different industries, and major players. It provides examples of large-scale IoT deployments and a glossary of common IoT terms.
The document discusses smart cities, defining them as cities that use information and communication technologies to be more efficient, manage resources better, and improve citizens' quality of life. It describes key factors in smart city development like new technologies, open innovation, and technical architecture. It also outlines examples of smart city initiatives and applications around the world and how 5G can further enable smart cities.
This publication presents a compilation of extended abstracts of VTT’s recent research on smart cities. The global challenge is to reduce environmental impact and carbon footprint. At the same time societal development needs to be addressed and people well-being must be in focus. Pressure is growing to reduce our environmental impact and there is a parallel compelling need for business to stay globally competitive. Investment and expenditure needs for improving energy efficiency, modernizing infrastructure and creating high quality living environments are enormous. Smart sustainability as a dominating driver of technology development can also be seen in the R&D portfolio of VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland. A clear focus of our research for smart cities is sustainable city development, holistic energy systems, eco-efficient and intelligent buildings and districts as well as smart transport systems. In addition we focus on services, ICT and material technologies for improving smart city functions.
Third seminary realized at PET-MA group, and the first one in english version (instead of portuguese). Speech about Smart Cities, IoT - and specially what is behind of the marketing involved into these topics.
Wireless Connectivity of Real-World ApplicationsKingsly5
The document discusses wireless connectivity and its applications. It begins by defining wireless connectivity and exploring its significance. It then outlines the evolution of wireless technologies from early experiments to modern cellular networks and Wi-Fi. The impact on communication is also examined, including increased accessibility, the mobile revolution, and flexible work environments. Major wireless technologies like Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, cellular networks, and IoT protocols are introduced. Real-world applications are explored across healthcare, smart cities, manufacturing, agriculture, and education.
The document discusses smart cities and India's Smart Cities Mission. It provides context on smart cities as urban developments that integrate technology solutions to manage city assets. It then summarizes India's Smart Cities Mission which aims to develop 100 cities making them citizen-friendly and sustainable. Key features of smart cities discussed include smart parking, traffic management, waste management, and smart city management. The document also reviews smart city budgets, top smart cities, and challenges in developing smart cities.
ICT terms & Need for ICT in Agricultural ExtensionDevegowda S R
This document discusses the use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) like computers, the internet, broadcasting, and telephony for agricultural extension. It defines several ICT approaches for agriculture including e-agriculture, e-extension/cyber extension, mobile telephony, innovative radio, decision support systems, management information systems, expert systems, e-learning, and open distance learning. There is a need for ICT in agricultural extension to accelerate agricultural growth, expand knowledge resources, facilitate better information access, supplement inadequate technical manpower, strengthen research-extension-farmer linkages, and empower small and marginal farmers. While India has made progress expanding telecommunications infrastructure, there is still a large gap between urban and rural
Towards a Joined-up Smart Cities Vision and Strategy for Europe - Data DaysSarahBuelens
DG Connect aims to transform Europe's cities by making public services more convenient through technology, making cities more responsive to citizens, and providing information to improve decision making, all while achieving environmental sustainability and economic viability. The document outlines several principles and use cases for smart cities, including optimizing existing infrastructure, ensuring interoperability and open data standards, and creating scalable and secure technology solutions. It also lists several DG Connect activities and portfolios that focus on areas like open data, cloud systems, broadband access, smart energy and mobility initiatives, and using cities as test beds for innovative internet-enabled services.
How smart street lights accelerate the transformation of smart cities - C&T R...Antenna Manufacturer Coco
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IRJET-The Internet of Things Applications for Challenges and Related Future T...IRJET Journal
The document discusses the Internet of Things (IoT), including its applications, characteristics, and future challenges. Some key points:
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2) Examples of IoT applications discussed are smart cities, smart homes/buildings, and smart energy grids. These allow for improved infrastructure, transportation, energy monitoring and more.
3) Characteristics of the IoT include interconnectivity, heterogeneity, dynamic changes, enormous scale, safety, and connectivity. Everything can be connected through different networks and protocols.
This document discusses the growth of the Internet of Things (IoT) market and opportunities for smart cities. It notes that by 2020 there will be over 34 billion IoT devices connected, and that the IoT market is expected to generate trillions in spending between 2015-2020. Various industries and environments that can benefit from IoT solutions are described, including manufacturing, transportation, infrastructure, and more. The document advocates for using citizen-generated data and crowdsourcing to help cities better understand issues and optimize resources. Smartphone sensors and mobile applications are presented as ways to empower citizens to actively contribute data for smart city initiatives.
The document provides an overview of Internet of Things (IoT) in the development of smart cities. It discusses key concepts of IoT such as connectivity of devices, communication protocols, and data management challenges. The document also outlines several applications of IoT in smart cities including smart energy grids, transportation, healthcare, infrastructure, and environmental monitoring. It proposes a framework for distributed data processing and privacy preservation in IoT using techniques like data minimization, access control, and encryption.
Smart city can be understood as a city IT project. But City IT is quite different from office IT. This slide explains difference between City and Office IT and shows ways to build a smart city successfully based on experiences from Korea and Seoul in particular.
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S04-Pres03-RM Agarwal-Smart City ITU Final .pptx
1. Information & Communication Technologies (ICTs):
Enabler of Green Smart Cities
R.M. Agarwal
Deputy Director General, Networks & Technologies Cell,
Ministry of Communications & IT, Department of Telecommunications, Govt. of India
ddgnt-dot@nic.in
SMART CITY
2. Smart city involves
• Creating a developed urban area
• Sustainable economic development
• High quality of life
through strong human capital, social capital
and ICT infrastructure.
SMART CITY
3. Cities are Engines of Economic Growth
Urban population is currently around 31% of the
total population
Contributes over 60% of India’s GDP
Projected -- 75% of the national GDP in the next
15 years
SMART CITY
4. Government of India has embarked on an ambitious
program of developing
100 Smart Cities on fast track.
SMART CITIES – IN INDIA
5. Smart Cities in the developed nations: main focus
Asset optimization
Operations monitoring
Data communications and analytics
Transition to a low carbon economy
SMART CITIES – IN INDIA
6. Smart Cities in the developing nations: main focus
Building modern physical infrastructure,
Scalable, intelligent and interoperable
as existing cities have inadequate physical
infrastructure
SMART CITIES – IN INDIA
7. Massive urbanisation
Urbanisation accompanies economic growth
30% urban population contributes 60% of GDP
Urban centers are engines of economic growth
India is at the cusp of transition point from where
urbanisation will speed up
Pressure on existing resources due to population
explosion
Need to manage them efficiently & effectively
SMART CITY: DRIVERS
8. Need for sustainable development
Reduce green house gases emission
Evolution of ICTs (IoT, IPv6, sensors etc.) to support such
initiatives on a societal scale.
Rapidly declining technology costs
SMART CITY: DRIVERS
9. ROLE OF ICT IN SMART CITY
ICT
Acts as an enabler to make a city smart
Planning of ICT infrastructure be the prime focus
area both for Greenfield & Brownfield smart
cities.
Intelligent and efficient use of resources
Cost and energy savings
Reduced environmental footprint
Different systems and nodes are interconnected
on common ICT infrastructure
10. ROLE OF ICT IN SMART CITY
Interconnected and Independent services
should evolve through
Well Defined Digital Master Plan for the City
Under centralized governance dashboard of
stakeholders
11. Smart-Grid & Energy Efficiency
Intelligent Transport System
Smart Health Care
Intelligent Water Distribution System
Intelligent piped GAS (cooking) Distribution System
Intelligent Waste Management System
Intelligent Public Safety & Surveillance
Smart Apartments & Office Buildings
And many more…..
THRUST AREAS – FOR A SMART CITY
12. TELECOM ENABLERS OF SMART CITY
• Telecom Network
• Cloud Computing
• Internet of Things(IoT) & IPv6
• Sensor Network
• Mobile Broadband
13. TELECOM ENABLERS OF SMART CITY
Telecom Network
connectivity of several hundreds of nodes talking
seamlessly with one another and transferring vital data.
multiple cellular/mobile networks plus cable, satellite, RF
mesh, microwave, radio, fiber optics, WiFi for homes and
offices, 6LowPAN ,smart meters and appliances.
Fibre optic network as a metro loop around the city
Wireless access to this underlying Fibre network by WiFi /
RF Mesh/ cellular/mobile technologies or some
combination.
14. TELECOM ENABLERS OF SMART CITY
Cloud computing
Cloud computing delivers powerful solutions via the
Internet with tremendous economies of scale, as users
don’t have to buy and maintain giant data centers or hire
and train large IT staffs.
Cloud computing framework delivers efficiency and
optimization in processing the big data generated by the
thousands of sensors across the city.
15. TELECOM ENABLERS OF SMART CITY
Internet of Things & IPv6
Multitude of devices interacting with control units and
dashboards, through sensors, RFID, M2M, satellite and
GPS.
Not just about connecting humans with things, things could
also interact with each other.
By 2020, 30 billion things will be connected or will be smart
each having unique IP address, thanks to IPv6.
16. TELECOM ENABLERS OF SMART CITY
Sensor Network
utilizes wire line and/or wireless sensor networks.
interconnected autonomous devices, distributed across the location,
and use sensors to collectively monitor physical/environmental
conditions (e.g., temperature, sound, vibration, pressure, motion or
pollutants).
Smart meters and smart sensors - intelligent electric power grids,
water and gas networks.
Smart thermostats and building management systems - being able to
‘talk’ and ‘listen.’
Electronic records, analytics and better access to healthcare with in-
home consultations.
Intelligent transportation management software, roadway sensors and
smart parking apps.
17. TELECOM ENABLERS OF SMART CITY
Mobile Broadband
National Telecom Policy-2012 envisages transformation of
mobile phone from a mere communication device to an
instrument of empowerment
Smart Phones- dual role:
Smart phones - a “delivery platform” - to receive alerts and
access city services.
Smart phones – as a “sensor network” - are equipped with
a GPS, a microphone, a gyroscope, a light sensor, a camera,
an accelerometer, a barometer, a thermometer, a
magnetometer and a hygrometer.
18. TELECOM RELATED CONSIDERATIONS
Standards consisting of well-defined set of
parameters - needs to be followed for smart
telecom components and attendant services
in each vertical.
19. TELECOM RELATED CONSIDERATIONS
Finalization & enforcement of standards for
different layers in each of the smart services.
Ensure interoperability of the components
Service agnostic underlying architecture
20. TELECOM RELATED CONSIDERATIONS
Resolution of telecom related issues in smart
services is underway in DoT
– KYC norms,
– SIM related issues,
– Roaming related issues,
– Numbering plan to be followed in case of smart
devices,
– spectrum requirement in local network
21. TELECOM RELATED CONSIDERATIONS
National Telecom M2M Roadmap to be
released soon.
Home and neighborhood networks - to use
free bands as much as possible through
common home gateway for multiple services
22. TELECOM RELATED CONSIDERATIONS
Smart services in smart city should necessarily be IP based
and not on propriety standards
Provides flexibility to the planners in future so as to have
interoperability.
DoT has already mandated use of IPv6 through its related
roadmaps.
Government Communication Network – consideration for
TErrestrial TRunked Radio (TETRA) - digital trunked radio
systems, defined by ETSI to meet the emergency and security
requirements of the Government Departments
23. Cities account for 70 per cent of global greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions
Over 60-80 per cent of global energy consumption
70 per cent of the world’s population will live in
cities by 2050
90% of the world’s urban population growth will
take place in developing countries, with India
taking a significant share of that
CLEAN TECHNOLOGY
24. Carbon emissions 2013
9.9 bn tonnes – 61% more than 1990
Contributed by China 28%, US 14%,EU 10%, India 7%
Per capita per year
Global : 1.4 tonnes
US 4.5; China :2.0; EU 1.9;India 0.5 (in tonnes)
(source: Global Carbon Project)
CLEAN TECHNOLOGY
25. AN OPTIMAL APPROACH
Building a smart city requires a system-wide view and an
integrated approach
Adoption of open standards to ensure interoperability
Holistic thinking and collaborative work vs traditional separate,
“siloed” departments with little interaction
Reduce overall information technology (IT) costs by as much as
25% just by implementing a master IT architecture and
technology roadmap
This is not to suggest that cities must finance and implement
dozens of investments at one time. In fact, it is entirely fine to
begin with just one or two projects.
26. Smart City
Life is better in a smart city
– better for people,
–better for Governance
–and better for businesses
Life is better in a smart city
– better for people
–better for Governance
–better for business
– and not the least better for the earth