smart cities: the role of itc in creating a low-carbon city region economy
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SMART CITIES: The role of ITC in creating a low-carbon city region economy. Andrew Carter , deputy chief executive, Centre for Cities (chair ) Steve Peel , business development executive, Global Technology Solutions, IBM Hayley Dunlop , UK and Ireland smart grid director, GE - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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SMART CITIES: The role of ITC in creating a low-carbon city region economyAndrew Carter, deputy chief executive, Centre for Cities (chair)Steve Peel, business development executive, Global Technology Solutions, IBMHayley Dunlop, UK and Ireland smart grid director, GEJulie Alexander, director of urban development, Siemens Colin Blackburn, Leeds City Region SecretariatTom Bridges, chief economic development officer, Leeds Bradford Future Cities
The role of ICT in creating a low carbon economyJulie AlexanderSiemens
Base Leeds
University of Bradford, 11th September 2012
Siemens AG 2011. All rights reserved. Siemens AG 2011. All rights reserved.3| 4 |
Compe-titiveness EnvironmentQuality of LifeGovernanceMegatrends Cities are competing globallyto make their urban areas attractive to live and to invest inMegatrends and Sustainable Urban DevelopmentGlobalization & UrbanizationGlobal players / trade volume increase2030: 60% of population in citiesHigh density living demands for new patterns in infrastructureDemographic Change65+ generation will nearly double by 2030 (from 7% to 12%)Need for adequate infrastructuresas well as health- and elder care Climate ChangeCities responsible for ~80% GHGNeed for resource efficiency and environmental care
Challenge to balance between competitiveness, environment and quality of life, and to finance infrastructure solutionsAchieve committed CO2 targets
Sustainable Urban Development Siemens AG 2011. All rights reserved.4| 5 |PerceptionstudiesMegacity ChallengesComprehensive analysis based on interviews with over 500 city managers in 25 selected megacitiesUrban infrastructure trends and challenges as well as global best practices Commissioned research to GlobScan and MRCMHOther studies: The Sustainable Cities Challenge in Canada,ICT for City Management
ComparativestudiesGreen City Index (commissioned research to EIU)Index compares cities across 8 dimensions of sustainability: CO2, Energy, Buildings, Transport, Waste & Land Use, Water, Air, GovernanceEurope, Africa, North / South America, Asia, GermanyDeep-Dives in infrastructure, e.g. Complete Mobility Index
Implemen-tation studiesSustainable urban infrastructure series"How to become a sustainable city" with focus on measures for resource efficiency and CO2 abatement Examples: Dublin, London, Munich, Yekaterinburg, Trondheim, ...
Siemens insights into "how to become sustainable", jointly developed with major world cities Siemens AG 2011. All rights reserved.5| 6 |Cities need pioneering solutions to solve their problems
From closed island solutions and single products to cross-linked intelligent infrastructure solutionsHow to get enough electric power, how to bring enough goods into the city?How to manage the ever increasing traffic?How to reduce the energy consumption and emissions?How to ensure security and safetyof people?How to finance all this? Siemens AG 2011. All rights reserved.| 7 |
Cities have various options to improve energy efficiency, eco-friendliness and quality of lifeEnergy
Power Generation & Distribution Smart applications HVDC1)Smart Grid Renewable 1) High Voltage Direct CurrentWater & Waste
Waste, Water and Wastewater MgmtTransportation
High-speed trainTraffic MgmtE-mobility Alt. drive systemBuilding,Lighting&Security
Smart and efficient buildingsEfficient lighting Safety Center
Health Medical Technology Green Hospitals
Siemens AG 2011. All rights reserved.7| 8 |Helping cities manage and control informationCity Cockpit
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Energy consumption of residential buildingsEnergy efficient buildings standardsEnergy efficient buildings initiativesHelping Cities Define KPIs1) A research project conducted by the Economist Intelligence Unit, sponsored by SiemensEnergy consumptionEnergy intensityRenewable energy consumptionClean and efficient energy policiesUse of non-car transportSize of non-car transport networkGreen transport promotionCongestion reduction policiesMunicipal waste productionWaste reduction policiesGreen land use policiesWater consumptionWater leakagesWaste water treatmentWater efficiencyand treatment policiesNitrogen dioxideSulphur dioxideOzoneParticulate matterAir quality policiesGreen action planGreen managementPublic participation in green policyCO2 intensityCO2 emissionsCO2 reduction strategyEGCICO2EnergyBuil-dingsWaterWaste &land useAirGreen gover-nanceTrans-portEGCI Set priorities of measures through identification of categories with performance below averageCO2Energy Siemens AG 2011. All rights reserved.| 10 |
Energy consumption of residential buildingsEnergy efficient buildings standardsEnergy efficient buildings initiativesHelping Cities Define KPIs1) A research project conducted by the Economist Intelligence Unit, sponsored by SiemensEnergy consumptionEnergy intensityRenewable energy consumptionClean and efficient energy policiesUse of non-car transportSize of non-car transport networkGreen transport promotionCongestion reduction policiesMunicipal waste productionWaste reduction policiesGreen land use policiesWater consumptionWater leakagesWaste water treatmentWater efficiencyand treatment policiesNitrogen dioxideSulphur dioxideOzoneParticulate matterAir quality policiesGreen action planGreen managementPublic participation in green policyCO2 intensityCO2 emissionsCO2 reduction strategyEGCICO2EnergyBuil-dingsWaterWaste &land useAirGreen gover-nanceTrans-portEGCI Set priorities of measures through identification of categories with performance below averageCO2Energy Siemens AG 2011. All rights reserved.| 11 |Surveillance allows real time monitoring
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Mobile parking payments Siemens AG 2011. All rights reserved.| 14 |Registering on a central system
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High-voltage urban link Efficient energy transport by HV close to the consumer
Industry40% less energy consumption with variable-speed drives
Complete MobilityHigher attractiveness of public transport (reduced waiting and up to 20% fuel savings)
Street lightingPotential in Europe:3.5 million tons less CO2 emissions with LED systemsEfficient energy productionCombined Cycle: From 50% to 60%Steam Power Plant: From 40% to 47%CO2-free energy to the cityExample HVDC: China 800 kV, 6.4 GW, 2,000 kmBuilding technologies30% less energy used through buildingenergy management
SIPLINK12 tons less CO2 emis-sions per ship and day by local grid connectionRenewablesWind turbines: Efficiency up from 1 MW to 6 MW (gearless)Traffic management systemTraffic speed: +37%Commuter times cut by 17% Existing technology achieves high gains in efficiency and CO2 abatementSustainable Green Growth Siemens examples for energy efficiency in the city Siemens AG 2011. All rights reserved.| 16 |
Sustainable Transport NetworksEfficient:InformedNo contingency planReliable:On time2 Hrs late
Connected:Multi-modalNo connections
Affordable??150 inc taxi
Siemens AG 2011. All rights reserved.| 17 |Central data log in real time
Siemens AG 2011. All rights reserved.| 18 |Whats your vision for your city of the future?
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Thank you!
[email protected] Crystal Siemens AG 2011. All rights reserved.
LCR BASE Smart Cities Session
ENABLING THE DIGITAL INFRASTRUCTURE FOR THE FUTURE
Colin BlackburnDigital Infrastructure & Broadband Lead
11 September 2012
www.leedscityregion.gov.uk2122OutlineLCR Digital FrameworkDelivery ActivityDigital InfrastructureAdoption and ExploitationPublic Service DeliveryOpportunities and Engagement
Insert the rocket
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Leeds City Region Digital Infrastructure Plan
May 2012LCR Digital Priorities
272728Digital Infrastructure ProvisionExisting Broadband Speeds in West Yorkshire
90% superfast broadband by 2015
At least 2mbs elsewhere
Demand stimulation & business supportSMEs LCR Priority Sectors incl. manufacturing, & low carbon indsResidents
Fastrack highways & planning processes
Bradford-Leeds Super Connected Cities
Ultrafast broadband incl. Enterprise Zone
Free wireless Leeds & Bradford City Centres
Corridor Wireless
Telehealth projects roll-outEnabling the Digital Infrastructure of the FutureSignificant economic impact, jobs and how we live
Challenge is significant aim high
Infrastructure and demand stimulation
Increasing competitiveness and innovation vital
Significant ongoing investment and business support essential
Complementary roles for both public and private sectors
chug along or grasp the Bullet?
LCR BASE Smart Cities Session
ENABLING THE DIGITAL INFRASTRUCTURE FOR THE FUTURE
Colin BlackburnDigital Infrastructure & Broadband Lead
11 September 2012www.leedscityregion.gov.uk
Tom BridgesChief economic development officer, Leeds Bradford Future Cities [no slides]