Challenges in Replication and Scaling of PEDs – Technical and Organisational ...Dirk Ahlers
Presentation at: NordicEdge 2021 Smart City Research Symposium | Workshop: Positive Energy Districts as vehicle towards smart and sustainable cities | 22.09.2021
Dirk Ahlers, Annemie Wyckmans
NTNU – Smart Sustainable Cities Group
Understanding Smart Cities as Social MachinesDirk Ahlers
Presentation at the 4th International Workshop on the Theory and Practice of Social Machines SOCM2016 at WWW2016.
Paper is here:
http://www2016.net/proceedings/companion/p759.pdf
More details: http://www.informatik.uni-oldenburg.de/~there/
NTNU Climate-KIC Lessons: Learnings from project development with Climate-KICDirk Ahlers
17.11.2020 NTNU Horizon Europe and Erasmus+ Launch Week, Session: Experiences & Opportunities with EIT Climate-KIC. - European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT) in Horizon Europe.
Invited talk on Learnings from project development, participation, and management with Climate-KIC.
A Smart City Ecosystem enabling Open Innovation - I4CS2019Dirk Ahlers
A Smart City Ecosystem enabling Open Innovation. Dirk Ahlers, Leendert Wienhofen, Sobah Abbas Petersen, Mohsen Anvaari. 19th International Conference on Innovations for Community Services (I4CS 2019). Paper presentation, 20190625. Part of the +CityxChange project
Developing & applying a successful MaaS business modelIRIS Smart Cities
Mobility as a Service (MaaS) concept and IRIS partners in Gothenburg, Sweden are transforming our relationship to car ownership, mobility behaviours and improving urban sustainability.
The EC2B mobility concept and business model is creating value for: USERS - as an alternative to owning a car, enabling more sustainable lifestyle
PROPERTY DEVELOPERS – with a sustainable mobility concept, alternative to providing expensive car parking
TRANSPORT OPERATORS - through a bigger market, opportunity to attract new customers, and
CITIES - boosting sustainable development, fewer cars and more sustainable land use
Learn about the concept and takeup by citizens, residents, housing developers and local authorities making this MaaS business model a success to inspire you.
Challenges in Replication and Scaling of PEDs – Technical and Organisational ...Dirk Ahlers
Presentation at: NordicEdge 2021 Smart City Research Symposium | Workshop: Positive Energy Districts as vehicle towards smart and sustainable cities | 22.09.2021
Dirk Ahlers, Annemie Wyckmans
NTNU – Smart Sustainable Cities Group
Understanding Smart Cities as Social MachinesDirk Ahlers
Presentation at the 4th International Workshop on the Theory and Practice of Social Machines SOCM2016 at WWW2016.
Paper is here:
http://www2016.net/proceedings/companion/p759.pdf
More details: http://www.informatik.uni-oldenburg.de/~there/
NTNU Climate-KIC Lessons: Learnings from project development with Climate-KICDirk Ahlers
17.11.2020 NTNU Horizon Europe and Erasmus+ Launch Week, Session: Experiences & Opportunities with EIT Climate-KIC. - European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT) in Horizon Europe.
Invited talk on Learnings from project development, participation, and management with Climate-KIC.
A Smart City Ecosystem enabling Open Innovation - I4CS2019Dirk Ahlers
A Smart City Ecosystem enabling Open Innovation. Dirk Ahlers, Leendert Wienhofen, Sobah Abbas Petersen, Mohsen Anvaari. 19th International Conference on Innovations for Community Services (I4CS 2019). Paper presentation, 20190625. Part of the +CityxChange project
Developing & applying a successful MaaS business modelIRIS Smart Cities
Mobility as a Service (MaaS) concept and IRIS partners in Gothenburg, Sweden are transforming our relationship to car ownership, mobility behaviours and improving urban sustainability.
The EC2B mobility concept and business model is creating value for: USERS - as an alternative to owning a car, enabling more sustainable lifestyle
PROPERTY DEVELOPERS – with a sustainable mobility concept, alternative to providing expensive car parking
TRANSPORT OPERATORS - through a bigger market, opportunity to attract new customers, and
CITIES - boosting sustainable development, fewer cars and more sustainable land use
Learn about the concept and takeup by citizens, residents, housing developers and local authorities making this MaaS business model a success to inspire you.
Iris webinar - Creating smart city business models v4.pptIRIS Smart Cities
In this webinar, Utrecht University presents recipes to generate smart city business model ideas. Also, a blueprint for a Business Incubation Program will be showcased by incubator UtrechtInc, to guide teams behind the respective ideas to revenue and scale.
Accelerating smart city roll out: blending social & economic factors to boost...IRIS Smart Cities
Replicating smart city technologies across multiple districts or across Europe is a major challenge. We need faster deployment of existing and proven pilot initiatives to stand a chance of hitting environmental targets. Deployment and adoption of solutions from a blended social and economic aspect is key to accelerating this roll out. Mauritz Knuts of Vaasa Region Development Company and Co-Chair of a European working group on replicating smart city solutions about scaling up and transferring smart city technologies spoke at a Smart Tampere event in early 2020 to discuss how to make things happen.
Collection Methodology for Key Performance Indicators for Smart Sustainable C...ITU
These indicators have been developed to provide cities with a consistent and standardised method to collect
data and measure performance and progress to:
achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
becoming a smarter city
becoming a more sustainable city
The indicators will enable cities to measure their progress over time, compare their performance to other
cities and through analysis and sharing allow for the dissemination of best practices and set standards for
progress in meeting the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) at the city level.
For more information visit: https://www.itu.int/en/ITU-T/ssc/united/Pages/default.aspx
Working towards Sustainable Software for Science (an NSF and community view)Daniel S. Katz
This talk looks at the goal of sustainable scientific software from the point-of-view of an NSF program officer who funds software as infrastructure, meaning software that enables a community beyond the developers to perform research, and from the point-of-view of the attendees of the First Workshop on Sustainable Software for Science: Practice and Experiences (WSSSPE1, http://wssspe.researchcomputing.org.uk/wssspe1/). Issues to be discussed include what sustainability means, funding, incentives, career paths, and communities.
City of Stockholm: Smart Goods Distribution projectsGrowSmarter
This presentations includes examples from the City of Stockholm on their Clean Vehicles and Fuels program, consolidations centres and participation in EU freight related projects such as FREVUE.
Eva Sunnerstedt, City of Stockholm
Digital as an enabler for climate actionSoren Gigler
Digital innovations are key enablers for climate action and sustainability. the presentation provides an overview of the EU's program on the digital and green transformation and provides recommendations on how to leverage the power of digital innovations to address the challenges of climate change.
Iris webinar - Creating smart city business models v4.pptIRIS Smart Cities
In this webinar, Utrecht University presents recipes to generate smart city business model ideas. Also, a blueprint for a Business Incubation Program will be showcased by incubator UtrechtInc, to guide teams behind the respective ideas to revenue and scale.
Accelerating smart city roll out: blending social & economic factors to boost...IRIS Smart Cities
Replicating smart city technologies across multiple districts or across Europe is a major challenge. We need faster deployment of existing and proven pilot initiatives to stand a chance of hitting environmental targets. Deployment and adoption of solutions from a blended social and economic aspect is key to accelerating this roll out. Mauritz Knuts of Vaasa Region Development Company and Co-Chair of a European working group on replicating smart city solutions about scaling up and transferring smart city technologies spoke at a Smart Tampere event in early 2020 to discuss how to make things happen.
Collection Methodology for Key Performance Indicators for Smart Sustainable C...ITU
These indicators have been developed to provide cities with a consistent and standardised method to collect
data and measure performance and progress to:
achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
becoming a smarter city
becoming a more sustainable city
The indicators will enable cities to measure their progress over time, compare their performance to other
cities and through analysis and sharing allow for the dissemination of best practices and set standards for
progress in meeting the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) at the city level.
For more information visit: https://www.itu.int/en/ITU-T/ssc/united/Pages/default.aspx
Working towards Sustainable Software for Science (an NSF and community view)Daniel S. Katz
This talk looks at the goal of sustainable scientific software from the point-of-view of an NSF program officer who funds software as infrastructure, meaning software that enables a community beyond the developers to perform research, and from the point-of-view of the attendees of the First Workshop on Sustainable Software for Science: Practice and Experiences (WSSSPE1, http://wssspe.researchcomputing.org.uk/wssspe1/). Issues to be discussed include what sustainability means, funding, incentives, career paths, and communities.
City of Stockholm: Smart Goods Distribution projectsGrowSmarter
This presentations includes examples from the City of Stockholm on their Clean Vehicles and Fuels program, consolidations centres and participation in EU freight related projects such as FREVUE.
Eva Sunnerstedt, City of Stockholm
Digital as an enabler for climate actionSoren Gigler
Digital innovations are key enablers for climate action and sustainability. the presentation provides an overview of the EU's program on the digital and green transformation and provides recommendations on how to leverage the power of digital innovations to address the challenges of climate change.
Smart Cities and ICT - An assessment framework for Smart City ICT architectureHakan Demirel
There are many definitions of a <Smart City>, and almost all identify ICT as the key enabler. But, what are the characteristics of a smart city, and what is the role of ICT in enabling those characteristics? Moreover, how ICT maturity can be assessed in a smart city context?
The slides give a brief on smart city concepts, elaborate on the role of ICT in smart city enablement and also introduce an EA framework to assess ICT maturity of smart cities.
Virtualisation taking place – Martin BrynskovMartin Brynskov
How understanding virtualisation, the computing continuum and communities of practice is essential for making the right investments in research, innovation and deployment. A global perspective from Europe. By Martin Brynskov https://www.linkedin.com/in/brynskov/
This presentation focuses on the role breakthrough digital technologies, such as AI, blockchain and IoT can play for climate action and sustainble development. It also addresses the urgent need to enhance the sustainability of the ICT sector. The digital transformation approach is based on a people-centered approach that puts people instead of technologies first
CUD Conference BREAKOUT Agenda - Amsterdam 23-24 September 2008Shane Mitchell
Breakout sessions agenda detailing speakers and themes across the two day conference bringing together thought leaders from business, city governments and academia to share knowledge, experiences and collaborate to drive forward the CUD program.
Presentation of the AGIT White Paper on ecodesign by Caroline Vateau at ICTFOOTPRINT.eu workshop in Paris https://ictfootprint.eu/en/events/ictfootprinteu-workshop-event
Møte mellom NTNU Smart Sustainable Cities og Gjøvik kommune & eiendomsutviklere, 12.01.2018
Overview of ICT/Computer Science projects and large-scale approaches to understand and build Smart Cities.
Data Technology and Smart Cities - Guest lecture Sustainable Facility ManagementDirk Ahlers
Introduction Guest lecture in the Sustainable Facility Management about use cases and options of using Smart City Data Technology in facility management
Presentation about NTNU Smart Cities and Carbon Track and Trace project "Climate-Smart Cities - CTT" at Nordic Edge 2016 Stavanger at the Public Solutions Centre Court 20161007
CTT2.0 Carbon Track and Trace presentation for SmartCitiesIndiaExpoDirk Ahlers
CTT2.0 Carbon Track and Trace presentation for SmartCitiesIndiaExpo May 2016 in Delhi and presentation to interested partners. Overview of the project, aims, approaches, technologies used to measure, report, understand greenhouse gas emissions
Granularity as a Qualitative Concept for Geographic Information Retrieval (GIR)Dirk Ahlers
We examine the notion of granularity for qualitative thinking about geospatial data and location references. Granularity can be understood as an abstraction of level of detail or spatial resolution. Pure coordinates, which may exhibit strong overprecision for some entities, can be combined with not only hierarchical gazetteer information, but also with derived semantic data about extent of places and thus help in correct interpretations without necessarily more accuracy.
Surveying GeoNames Gazetteer Data for the Nordic CountriesDirk Ahlers
This paper takes a look at freely available gazetteer data for the Nordic countries. We examine locations in this region to understand their characteristics and the quality of the available data. Several indicators are developed and discussed to estimate the expected data quality. The distribution and coverage of the data is mapped and the accuracy and quality indicators are visualized. The used method focuses on populated places as locations of interest but can be extended to arbitrary types of locations. The results give insights into the distribution of issues based on multiple indicators and give an estimate of per-country data quality.
Full paper at http://ojs.bibsys.no/index.php/NIK/article/view/253
Carbon Track and Trace – CTT (A brief overview)Dirk Ahlers
An overview of the activities of the CTT Carbon Track and Trace project at NTNU. The project deals with greenhouse gas emission inventories in the context of smart sustainable cities. More details at http://carbontrackandtrace.com/
NTNU Delegation Smart Cities - Visit to DTUDirk Ahlers
Presentation of research fields in the context of smart cities of NTNU Computer Science (IDI). Part of the delegation to the smart cities group at DTU.
Challenges for Information Access in Multi-Disciplinary Product Design and En...Dirk Ahlers
In any larger engineering setting, there is a huge number of documents that engineers and others need to use and be aware of in their daily work. To improve the handling of this amount of documents, we propose to view it under the angle of a new domain for professional search, thus incorporating search engine knowledge into the process. We examine the use of Information Retrieval (IR), Recommender Systems (RecSys), and Knowledge Management (KM) methods in the engineering domain of Knowledge-based Engineering (KBE). The KBE goal is to capture and reuse knowledge in product and process engineering with a systematic method. Based on previous work in professional search and enterprise search, we explore a combination of methods and aim to identify key issues in their application to KBE. We list detected challenges, discuss information needs and search tasks, then focus on issues to solve for a successful integration of the IR and KBE domain and give a system overview of our approach to build a search and recommendation tool to improve the daily information- seeking workflow of engineers in knowledge-intense disciplines. Our work contributes to bridging the gap between Information Retrieval and engineering support systems.
Presentation of a paper at ICDIM. Full paper available from my homepage.
Visualizing a City Within a City — Mapping Mobility Within a University CampusDirk Ahlers
Urban mobility analysis usually examines large cities or even regions. We take another angle and examine a university campus as a city within a city to focus on small-scale and hyperlocal characteristics. The campus mobility data exhibits a high spatial and temporal granu- larity that we use to drive analyses and visualizations towards the aim of campus analytics. We describe the abstraction approaches and visualiza- tions used towards the development of our tool and share initial results of campus analytics.
Presentation given at BigDASC . Full paper available from my homepage.
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Putting the SPARK into Virtual Training.pptxCynthia Clay
This 60-minute webinar, sponsored by Adobe, was delivered for the Training Mag Network. It explored the five elements of SPARK: Storytelling, Purpose, Action, Relationships, and Kudos. Knowing how to tell a well-structured story is key to building long-term memory. Stating a clear purpose that doesn't take away from the discovery learning process is critical. Ensuring that people move from theory to practical application is imperative. Creating strong social learning is the key to commitment and engagement. Validating and affirming participants' comments is the way to create a positive learning environment.
Business Valuation Principles for EntrepreneursBen Wann
This insightful presentation is designed to equip entrepreneurs with the essential knowledge and tools needed to accurately value their businesses. Understanding business valuation is crucial for making informed decisions, whether you're seeking investment, planning to sell, or simply want to gauge your company's worth.
As a business owner in Delaware, staying on top of your tax obligations is paramount, especially with the annual deadline for Delaware Franchise Tax looming on March 1. One such obligation is the annual Delaware Franchise Tax, which serves as a crucial requirement for maintaining your company’s legal standing within the state. While the prospect of handling tax matters may seem daunting, rest assured that the process can be straightforward with the right guidance. In this comprehensive guide, we’ll walk you through the steps of filing your Delaware Franchise Tax and provide insights to help you navigate the process effectively.
Explore our most comprehensive guide on lookback analysis at SafePaaS, covering access governance and how it can transform modern ERP audits. Browse now!
Remote sensing and monitoring are changing the mining industry for the better. These are providing innovative solutions to long-standing challenges. Those related to exploration, extraction, and overall environmental management by mining technology companies Odisha. These technologies make use of satellite imaging, aerial photography and sensors to collect data that might be inaccessible or from hazardous locations. With the use of this technology, mining operations are becoming increasingly efficient. Let us gain more insight into the key aspects associated with remote sensing and monitoring when it comes to mining.
Accpac to QuickBooks Conversion Navigating the Transition with Online Account...PaulBryant58
This article provides a comprehensive guide on how to
effectively manage the convert Accpac to QuickBooks , with a particular focus on utilizing online accounting services to streamline the process.
What are the main advantages of using HR recruiter services.pdfHumanResourceDimensi1
HR recruiter services offer top talents to companies according to their specific needs. They handle all recruitment tasks from job posting to onboarding and help companies concentrate on their business growth. With their expertise and years of experience, they streamline the hiring process and save time and resources for the company.
What is the TDS Return Filing Due Date for FY 2024-25.pdfseoforlegalpillers
It is crucial for the taxpayers to understand about the TDS Return Filing Due Date, so that they can fulfill your TDS obligations efficiently. Taxpayers can avoid penalties by sticking to the deadlines and by accurate filing of TDS. Timely filing of TDS will make sure about the availability of tax credits. You can also seek the professional guidance of experts like Legal Pillers for timely filing of the TDS Return.
Memorandum Of Association Constitution of Company.pptseri bangash
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A Memorandum of Association (MOA) is a legal document that outlines the fundamental principles and objectives upon which a company operates. It serves as the company's charter or constitution and defines the scope of its activities. Here's a detailed note on the MOA:
Contents of Memorandum of Association:
Name Clause: This clause states the name of the company, which should end with words like "Limited" or "Ltd." for a public limited company and "Private Limited" or "Pvt. Ltd." for a private limited company.
https://seribangash.com/article-of-association-is-legal-doc-of-company/
Registered Office Clause: It specifies the location where the company's registered office is situated. This office is where all official communications and notices are sent.
Objective Clause: This clause delineates the main objectives for which the company is formed. It's important to define these objectives clearly, as the company cannot undertake activities beyond those mentioned in this clause.
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Liability Clause: It outlines the extent of liability of the company's members. In the case of companies limited by shares, the liability of members is limited to the amount unpaid on their shares. For companies limited by guarantee, members' liability is limited to the amount they undertake to contribute if the company is wound up.
https://seribangash.com/promotors-is-person-conceived-formation-company/
Capital Clause: This clause specifies the authorized capital of the company, i.e., the maximum amount of share capital the company is authorized to issue. It also mentions the division of this capital into shares and their respective nominal value.
Association Clause: It simply states that the subscribers wish to form a company and agree to become members of it, in accordance with the terms of the MOA.
Importance of Memorandum of Association:
Legal Requirement: The MOA is a legal requirement for the formation of a company. It must be filed with the Registrar of Companies during the incorporation process.
Constitutional Document: It serves as the company's constitutional document, defining its scope, powers, and limitations.
Protection of Members: It protects the interests of the company's members by clearly defining the objectives and limiting their liability.
External Communication: It provides clarity to external parties, such as investors, creditors, and regulatory authorities, regarding the company's objectives and powers.
https://seribangash.com/difference-public-and-private-company-law/
Binding Authority: The company and its members are bound by the provisions of the MOA. Any action taken beyond its scope may be considered ultra vires (beyond the powers) of the company and therefore void.
Amendment of MOA:
While the MOA lays down the company's fundamental principles, it is not entirely immutable. It can be amended, but only under specific circumstances and in compliance with legal procedures. Amendments typically require shareholder
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Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
1. Transition processes and digital
transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
TRANSFORM Series: Smart Cities and Communities
DCU Business School, Dublin/online
10.02.2021
Dr. Dirk Ahlers
Smart Sustainable Cities Group
NTNU – Norwegian University of Science and Technology
https://www.ntnu.edu/smartcities
https://www.ntnu.edu/employees/dirk.ahlers
3. 3 Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
[http://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/sustainable-development-goals/
http://www.undp.org/content/undp/en/home/sustainable-development-goals/goal-11-
sustainable-cities-and-communities.html]
4. 4 Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
UN SDGs – zoom out/in
[https://www.stockholmresilience.org/research/research-news/2016-06-14-how-food-connects-all-the-sdgs.html
https://www.globalgoals.org/11-sustainable-cities-and-communities]
5. 5 Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
Smart City Strategies
• Sustainable and livable urban futures
• Open Innovation and Co-creation
• Open ecosystem, not only driven by municipality
• Enabling urban change
– Environmental, economical, societal, technical challenges
– Increase sustainability, resilience, livability
– Improve services, enable new services
– Digital transformation, digitalization
– Real-time city understanding
• Scalable and transferable solutions
• Combination of low- and high-tech solutions
• Integrated solutions, not only ICT
6. 6 Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
Handling Complexity
• Smart City ➞ Smart City Development and Evolution
• Cities are complex
• Integrated interoperable solutions are hard
• Goal: Keep flexibility, enable experimentation
7. 7 Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
Smart City Evolution
City Evolution, City Systems Evolution
Technological
constraints
and
opportunities
City needs
and strategy
External and
internal
constraints,
options,
changes
[adapted from ITU-T, Setting the framework for an ICT architecture of a smart sustainable city (SSC-0345), 2015]
Architecture Evolution
and Adaptation,
Development and
Maintenance
Urban Renewal, City
Development, City
Redevelopment, Urban
Innovation
Smart City Co-Evolution
City ICT/EA
Smart Ci es
Enterprise
Architecture
Development
and
Evolu on
8. 8 Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
Stakeholders and context boundaries
Smart City
Company
1
Company
2
Company
4
Company
... Company
n
Municipality
National
Actors
City
networks
European
Actors
Company
3
Citizens
Technological solutions do
not operate in a vacuum.
9. 9 Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
Quadruple Helix Innovation Model
• Method used in Innovation,
Urban Planning/Development,
Citizen engagement
• Co-Creation and Open
Innovation
• Involvement and collaboration
of relevant actors
• Structural changes beyond any
one segment
• Smart city means involvement of
all stakeholders in urban
innovation, knowledge sharing,
collaboration
Participatory
Innovation
Industry
Academia
Civil Society
Government
[EU Digital Single Market: Open Innovation2.0 https://ec.europa.eu/digital-single-market/en/open-innovation-20]
10. 10 Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
Project Examples
11. Limerick · Trondheim · Alba Iulia · Písek · Sestao · Smolyan · Võru
+CityxChange
SCC1 Lighthouse Project for the
Development of Positive Energy Blocks
This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 824260.
http://cityxchange.eu/
12.
13.
14. Structure for urban
innovation spaces
• Activate the innovation potential &
innovation ecosystem of a city
• City as a living lab
• Innovation Playgrounds
• Innovation Labs & Citizen
Observatories
• Physical & virtual
• City & Areas & Labs
Example: Trondheim
15. +CityxChange Open Ecosystem concept
[A Smart City Ecosystem enabling Open Innovation. Dirk Ahlers, Leendert Wienhofen, Sobah Abbas
Petersen, Mohsen Anvaari. I4CS 2019, Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-22482-0_9]
16. Bold City Vision Framework
[D3.1 Framework for Bold City Vision, Guidelines, and Incentive Schemes,
https://cityxchange.eu/knowledge-base/framework-for-bold-city-vision-guidelines-and-incentive-
schemes/ ]
17. 17
Wireless Trondheim / Mazemap
Living Lab
• Range of applications on WiFi network
– WLAN indoor coverage on campus
• ‘Campus Analytics’
– Mobility data with high spatial and temporal
resolution
– Passive location sensing
– Device positions as proxy for people’s locations
– Abstraction and processing layers
• Data cleaning/preprocessing
• Movement Extraction
• Building-graph extraction
• Visualization
[Visualizing a City Within a City – Mapping Mobility Within a University Campus. Dirk Ahlers, Kristoffer Gebuhr Aulie, Jeppe Eriksen, and
John Krogstie. Vol. 166 LNICS http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-33681-7_41]
21. 21 Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
Known problem
[https://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/ccgg/trends/]
22. 22 Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
Post crisis is during crisis
• What can we learn from Covid-19 response?
• What structures can be applied for climate action?
• Lockdowns barely bring emissions down
• How to link Climate Action & Covid-Recovery
• European Green Deal: Climate neutrality by 2050
• New role of livable urban spaces
• New thinking around mobility
• Push for digitalisation
• We have to build a better world with better structures
23. 23 Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
Action? Action!
Societal
Action
Individual
Action
Systemic
Action
24. 24 Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
Covid-19 brings a new focus on livability
Eden, Janine and Jim from New York City, Street Seating (50076249568), CC BY 2.0
Fabian Deter, Pop-up Radweg auf dem Kottbusser Damm in Berlin, CC BY-SA 4.0
25. 25 Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
Takeaways
• Smart City is a challenging interdisciplinary topic
• Smart City as an evolution and transition process
• Make cities more livable, sustainable, understandable
• New opportunities and requirements arising
• Sustainability & resilience as main imperatives
Smart Cities,
Sustainability,
Climate Action
26. 26 Transition processes and digital transformation in Smart Sustainable Cities
Q&A
Contact
Dirk Ahlers
search://Dirk Ahlers
@dirkahlers
dirk.ahlers@ntnu.no
https://www.ntnu.edu/smartcities
https://www.ntnu.edu/employees/dirk.ahlers
+CityxChange
Twitter @plusCities
Web: cityxchange.eu
KB: cityxchange.eu/knowledge-base/