frost & sullivan ab smart communities feb 2013

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Moving Toward Smart Moving Toward Smart Communities Communities in in Europe Europe – The Role of the Mobile Industry The Role of the Mobile Industry Saverio Romeo, Industry Manager Telecommunications and Connected Public Sector 21-02-2013 © 2012 Frost & Sullivan. All rights reserved. This document contains highly confidential information and is the sole property of Frost & Sullivan. No part of it may be circulated, quoted, copied or otherwise reproduced without the written approval of Frost & Sullivan.

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Page 1: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Moving Toward Smart Moving Toward Smart Communities Communities in in Europe Europe –– The Role of the Mobile IndustryThe Role of the Mobile Industry

Saverio Romeo, Industry ManagerSaverio Romeo, Industry ManagerTelecommunications and Connected Public Sector

21-02-2013

© 2012 Frost & Sullivan. All rights reserved. This document contains highly confidential information and is the sole property of Frost & Sullivan. No part of it may be circulated, quoted, copied or otherwise reproduced without the written approval of Frost & Sullivan.

Page 2: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Today’s Presenter

Saverio Romeo, Industry Manager

Telecommunications and Connected Public SectorICT Frost & Sullivan Europe

2

Almost 15 years experience in telecommunications as university researcher in networking systems, network planning engineer at Vodafone Italia, telecommunications research and policy analyst at the European Commission, technology policy analyst at Technopolis Group, and telecommunications analyst at Frost & Sullivan. During the last two years, the digital technology aspects of smart communities has become a key research are for Saverio.

Page 3: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Focus Points

• Introducing the concept of smart communities

• Providing an overview on the evolution of smart community projects in Europe

• Discussing the current role of the mobile industry in smart

3

• Discussing the current role of the mobile industry in smart community projects

• Emphasizing a systematic view on smart community

• Seeing communities as technology ecosystems and the future role of the mobile industry

Page 4: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Introducing the Concept Smart Community

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Page 5: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Why Do We Talk About Smart City?

Smart CityAesthetics

and Social Perception Demography

InnovationThe balance between urban and rural population goes towards 80%-20%

City seen as an engine of new ideas and economic growth

5

Smart City and Social Perception of Cities

Demography

Sustainability

Source: Frost & Sullivan.

Making our living spaces sustainable from an environmental point of view and cost point of view

Re-emphasizing the Ancient Greek “agora’” through new technologies and creative approaches to living

Page 6: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

But, It Is not Just Large Cities. It Is a New Way of Seeing Smart Spaces in Broader Context

Small Towns

Cities• Smart metropolitan

areas and large urban conglomerate

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Public Buildings

Hubs andNeighborhoods

• Small towns, rural areas, peripheral areas need to embrace to “smartness” agenda

• Buildings are increasingly becoming active and intelligent units

• Intelligent spaces for businesses and citizens

Source: Frost & Sullivan.

Page 7: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Key Concepts in Smart Community and the Role of ICT

Mobility

A smart community is a system thatis able to optimise the use of itsresources enabling synergicinteractions between the varioussystems and networks, enablinghigh levels of mobility in terms ofpeople, resources, opportunities,and involving in the decisionmaking process the various

Collaborative Decision Making

7

Optimisation

making process the variousstakeholders living and operating in

the community.System

Source: Frost & Sullivan.

Information and Communications Technologies are The Necessary Enabler

Page 8: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

The Role of Mobile Industry in Smart Communities

˝Mobiles are our futures, the lifeblood ofour lifestyles, the neurons of our networksand soon – the central structure of our citiesThey may not offer shelter but they’ll activate

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awnings before it’s started raining. Soon enoughcity-dwellers will be utterly dependent on theseminiaturised and embedded crucial crowd-sourceddata that feeds the mighty machine mouths andminds of our metropolises.

˝Alex Haw & Carlo Ratti*. May 2012. “Living Bits and Bricks”. Architectural Review*MIT Senseable City Lab

Page 9: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Smart Community Projects in Europe

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Page 10: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Source of Smart Community Projects in Europe

Smart

Various levels of governments (national, regional, municipality) can use EU funding for their initiative

National government initiatives

Living Labs

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European Commission

SmartCommunityProjects in

Europe

Private-led Initiatives

Smart City and Community Initiatives

Research focused initiatives (e.g. FP7)

Companies participate in EU projects through the “matching funding” criterion

Page 11: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Nature of Smart Community Projects

One System only

High

Project with a focus on a specific system (energy, transport) of the community.

Num

ber

of P

roje

cts

11

Source: Frost & Sullivan.

Holistic View

Low

20202012

Project that aims at different systems of the community and at their interoperability. This also brings new professional entities such as a Digital Technology Officer or a Chief Technology Officer.

Num

ber

of P

roje

cts

Page 12: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Examples of “One System Only” Projects

Smart Mobility• The main focus in such projects is to help improve mobility for vehicles and pedestrians by

providing information on traffic, parking spots and reduce energy consumption and pollution.• Some examples of such projects are SMARTip, Smart Energy Demo-Fit for SET, Amsterdam

Smart City, i-scope Freilot, Cosmo, Co-cities, Intime, HeERO.

Smart Mobility• The main focus in such projects is to help improve mobility for vehicles and pedestrians by

providing information on traffic, parking spots and reduce energy consumption and pollution.• Some examples of such projects are SMARTip, Smart Energy Demo-Fit for SET, Amsterdam

Smart City, i-scope Freilot, Cosmo, Co-cities, Intime, HeERO.

Smart Participation• Projects focusing on Smart Participation aims to build a city/town where governance and

administration is undertaken based on the interaction between public officials and the citizens

Smart Participation• Projects focusing on Smart Participation aims to build a city/town where governance and

administration is undertaken based on the interaction between public officials and the citizens

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administration is undertaken based on the interaction between public officials and the citizens of that particular city/town.

• Examples: Smartcities in the North Sea Region,SMARTip (Cologne, Ghent and Oulu), PEOPLE (Bilbao, Bremen, Thermi, Vitry Sur Seine), Open Cities (Amsterdam, Barcelona, Berlin, Helsinki, Paris) Life 2.0 (Aalborg, Barcelona, Joensuu, Milan)

administration is undertaken based on the interaction between public officials and the citizens of that particular city/town.

• Examples: Smartcities in the North Sea Region,SMARTip (Cologne, Ghent and Oulu), PEOPLE (Bilbao, Bremen, Thermi, Vitry Sur Seine), Open Cities (Amsterdam, Barcelona, Berlin, Helsinki, Paris) Life 2.0 (Aalborg, Barcelona, Joensuu, Milan)

Smart Environment• Each of these projects have a different agenda. While some of them look to bring about

energy efficiency across all areas, some of them focus on specific areas like renovating public buildings to conserve energy, providing information about surrounding environment to citizen, assessing noise levels etc.

• SmartSpaces (Milan, Birmingham, Bristol, Istanbul, Belgrade, Leicester, Hagen, Lleida, Murcia, Venlo and Moulins.) Smart Energy Demo-Fit for SET (18 regions across Austria),SMARTip (Manchester, Ghent)

Smart Environment• Each of these projects have a different agenda. While some of them look to bring about

energy efficiency across all areas, some of them focus on specific areas like renovating public buildings to conserve energy, providing information about surrounding environment to citizen, assessing noise levels etc.

• SmartSpaces (Milan, Birmingham, Bristol, Istanbul, Belgrade, Leicester, Hagen, Lleida, Murcia, Venlo and Moulins.) Smart Energy Demo-Fit for SET (18 regions across Austria),SMARTip (Manchester, Ghent)

Page 13: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Examples of “Holistic” Projects

T-City Friedrichshafen SmartSantander

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Amsterdam Smart CityLiving PlanIT - Paredes

Page 14: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Smart Rural Areas – The Case of Superfast Cornwall

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An extraordinary effort to bring superfast broadband to Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly. But connectivity is not the only aim. Superfast Cornwall is promoting the development of services for digital inclusion, e-government and business innovation through initiatives such as Superfast Cornwall Innovation Labs and Superfast Cornwall Fund.

Page 15: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Smart Communities Spending – Extract from Frost & Sullivan European Smart Community Project Tracker

Smart Cities and Communities -European Innovation Partnership (SCC)

Varies from project to project

European Union Energy, Transport and Information and Communication Technologies.

Funding through yearly calls for proposals. In 2012, it was 81M Euros. For 2013, the project funding stands at 365M Euros.

SMARTip Manchester, Bologna, Cologne, Ghent, Oulu

United Kingdom, Italy, Germany, Belgium, Finland

Transforming public services by enabling its citizens to use and co-produce Internet enabled services. To introduce these innovations

Total project cost EUR 4.4M of which EUR 2.2M funded by EU as part of the Information and Communication Technologies Policy Support

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introduce these innovations in five test cities. This project includes three areas namely, Smart Engagement, Smart Environments and Smart Mobility.

Technologies Policy Support Programme (CIP ICT-PSP Program)

Smart Islands Agkistri, Majorca, Malta, Santorini, 7 Hellenic Small Islands

Greece, Spain, Malta (Mediterranean Islands)

Providing ICT based services for visitors and inhabitants in areas like mobility, tourism, leisure, yachting, real estate, weather, health and environment. These are operational applications in tablets that act as a source of information.

EUR 1.5M of which EUR 0.80M funded under the Information and Communication Technologies Policy Support Programme (CIP ICT-PSP Program).

Source: Frost & Sullivan.

Page 16: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Smart Communities Spending – An Estimation

2,100

5,670

3,000

4,000

5,000

6,000

Pu

blic In

vestm

en

t in

Sm

art

Co

mm

un

ity P

roje

cts

(€

millio

n)

Estimation based on the following source and consideration:

- Spending for 2012-2013 from the EU and some key European countries

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1,250

2,100

0

1,000

2,000

2012-2013 2014-2016 2017-2019

Pu

blic In

vestm

en

t in

Sm

art

Co

mm

un

ity P

roje

cts

Period

- Spending in 2014-2016 based on EU budget (Horizon 2020) and national dedicated budgets

- Smart community spending in 2017-2019 experience a substantial shift involving the private sector too

Source: Frost & Sullivan.

Page 17: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

The Role of the Mobile Industry inSmart Community Projects

Page 18: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Mobile Network Operators – Between Tactics and Full Involvement

• Consulting-based approach coming out primarily from M2M unit

TacticalTactical

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• Dedicated smart community team and dedicate smart community offer

ProactiveProactive

Source: Frost & Sullivan.

Page 19: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

The Current Model of MNO Smart City Offer

Smart community

Mobile Computing

Intelligent

Current offers can include all the four components or just some of them. In order to create this offer, the process of partnership is fundamental

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Smart community

offer

Intelligent and Secure

Network Services

Connectivity

Big Data

Source: Frost & Sullivan.

This structured offer is not very common among European MNOs

Page 20: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Mobile Apps for Smart Communities – The Key Role of Mobile Computing Ecosystems

•Smart City Apps are essential tools that enable city inhabitants to carry out their everyday activities. These apps maybe developed to support different public services. Currently, there are three main areas where smart city apps arebeing developed. These are Smart Mobility, Smart Governance, Smart Environment.

•Transport, Traffic and Navigation Apps: HopStop, Öffi-Public Transport Buddy, Citymapper, e-miXer In-Time, Wheelmap(for wheelchair users)

•Parking Apps: Parker and m-Parking

•Location- Based Apps: Wikitude, Acrossair, Good Food near you, Next2Me

•Tourism Apps: Walk and Feel (Helsinki), Time Travel Explorer (currently for London)

Smart MobilityThese are mostly location-based apps that provide information about navigation, real-timetraffic, public transport schedules, or parking spots. These may also include apps developed toassist tourists within a city.

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•Tourism Apps: Walk and Feel (Helsinki), Time Travel Explorer (currently for London)

Participative Governance Apps: FixMyCity, FixMyStreet, Meetup, Citizen Mailbox

Environment Apps: Pollution, Noise Meter, Smart Recycling, Visibility

Smart Governance

Smart Environment

These help build interaction between the Government and citizens. These apps aregenerally used to report problems and provide suggestions, which encourage participativegovernance in a city.

These are apps that provide useful information about the user’s surroundings with an aim topromote an eco-friendly society.

Page 21: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

European Cities Increasingly Relying on Mobile Apps for Their Services

Barcelona- MyCity Solutions

• Mobility: City Transport, City Traffic, iBiking, M-Parking

• Location-Based Applications:

Amsterdam Smart City

• Mobility: Amsterdam App, MyTrafficJam, Amsterdam Commuter, Park Shark API, BikeCityGuide

Many European cities are investing in developing mobile apps to facilitate the provision of publicservices in these areas. Barcelona and Amsterdam are two examples which have developed suchapps.

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• Location-Based Applications: Next2Me, City Beaches, City Agenda

• Governance: Citizen Mailbox, FixThis

BikeCityGuide

• Tourism: Bike Like a Local, WalkMe, CultureApp, Appening Amsterdam

• Governance and Safety: MyNewPremises, Vacant Offices Amsterdam, Drive Carefully, Swimmingwater Map

• Environment: Bulky Basics

Page 22: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

The Future of Smart Communities Projects in Europe – Toward a Networked Systemic View

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Page 23: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

A Networked Systemic View of Communities

platform exchanges

Imagine communities as a distributed network system of intelligent devices. These devices (buildings, roads, parks, fields, etc) communicate to each other. This requires a common language and common platform exchanges

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Page 24: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Toward a Smart Community Service Platform

Smart Community Service Platform

Healthcare

Transport

Education

Public Safety

Culture

Utilities

Housing

Smart Services to Citizens

Public Admin.

DemocraticEngagement

Environment

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Source: Frost & Sullivan.

Mobile Technologies

Cloud Computing, Networking, Software

Connectivity

Big Data

Digital Identity

and Security

Page 25: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Smart Communities Ecosystems

• Smart Community Service Platform requires a complex set of technologies, therefore a complex set of expertise.

• Ecosystems of different technology players can provide that set of expertise.

• Mobile network operators can drive or co-drive those ecosystems, in collaboration with other key technology players.

• Those ecosystems should go beyond ICT involving other industries relevant for smart communities projects.

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• Those ecosystems should engage proactively with community authorities guiding them in the long journey of transforming their communities in smart communities.

Page 26: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013
Page 27: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

Next Steps

Develop Your Visionary and Innovative SkillsGrowth Partnership Service Share your growth thought leadership and ideas or

join our GIL Global Community

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Join our GIL Community NewsletterKeep abreast of innovative growth opportunities

Page 28: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

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Page 29: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

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Page 30: Frost & Sullivan AB Smart Communities Feb 2013

For Additional Information

Joanna Lewandowska

Corporate Communications

ICT

+48 22 390 41 46

[email protected]

Saverio Romeo

Industry Manager

Telecommunications and Connected Public Sector

0044 (0)2073438367

[email protected]

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Cyril Cromier

Vice President, Sales

ICT

+33 1 4281 2244

[email protected]

Adrian Drozd

Research Director

ICT

+44 1865 398 699

[email protected]