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Collaborative Pathways Toward Future Smart Cities: Experience of Sweden Dr. Olga Kordas KTH Royal Institute of Technology
APAC Innovation Summit 2016 Series - Smart City, Hong Kong, 22 Sep 2016
Contact Dr. Olga Kordas KTH - Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden Director, KTH Energy Platform Director, KTH Centre for a Sustainable Built Environment Coordinator, Swedish Strategic Innovation Agenda ”Smart Sustainable Cities” E-mail: [email protected] www.kth.se www.chs.kth.se www.smartsustainablecities.se
Content
• Swedish experiences: sustainable urban development
• Global trends: smart city development
• Swedish national RDI platform “Smart Sustainable Cities”
Leading Swedish cities: visions & targets Göteborg is a sustainable city, open to the world, where everyone feels at home. 2020 Emission levels of CO2e will be reduced by at
least 40% compared to the levels in 1990 2050 The city will have a substantially reduced level
of GHG emissions to less than 2.0 tons CO2e per capita.
Malmö is a world leading in sustainable urban development by the year 2020:
- Sweden’s most climate-friendly city; - The city of the future; - Sustainable use of natural resources; - It’s easy to do the right thing in Malmö.
2020 Greenhouse gas emission will be reduced with 40% and the
use of energy will decrease by 20% per person 2030 the entire city will run on 100% renewable energy and the
use of energy will further decrease by 20% per person
Umeå growing with social, ecological, cultural and economic sustainability for 200 000 inhabitants by 2050. 2018 Climate neutral energy system 2020 Fossil fuel free public transport 2030 Fossil-fuel independent vehicle fleet 2045 No net greenhouse gas emissions in Umeå
Stockholm for everyone — the City of Stockholm should be a socially, financially, ecologically and democratically sustainable municipality by 2040. 2040 Reducing GHG emissions per person in
Stockholm to less than 2.3 tons CO2e per capita, and to be fossil-free
Global Challenges
Staffan Ingvarsson CEO AB Stokab
28/09/2016 Strategic Innovation Agenda for Smart Sustainable Cities 6
The attractive and livable city
The climate neutral city
The climate adapted city
The responsive city
The integrative, collaborative city
The resource saving city
The eco-friendly city
The healthy city
The responsible city (global footprint)
Pathways toward the smart sustainable city of the future
Staffan Ingvarsson CEO AB Stokab
Staffan Ingvarsson CEO AB Stokab
Staffan Ingvarsson CEO AB Stokab
Staffan Ingvarsson, CEO AB Stokab
RAPID DEVELOPMENT OF INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES Challenges:
• The protection of trust, security and privacy; system vulnerability due to increased integration
• Interoperability of emerging ICT infrastructure; managing the complexity of urban systems
• Overcoming the digital divide; preventing social and economic inequality between users and non-users of ICT
• Adapting to changes in working life, employment and labour markets resulting from increasing automation
• Mitigating the environmental impact of ICT
Strategic Innovation Agenda for Smart Sustainable Cities
Strategic Innovation Agenda for Smart Sustainable Cities
Needs identified in Sweden
• Improved coordination, collaboration and exchange
• Greater replication and scale up of SSC solutions
• Joint digital platforms, open standards and data sharing
• New knowledge, capabilities and solutions
• Strengthened innovation eco-system
• New investment and business models
• Empowered citizens
Strategic collaboration Smart Sustainable Cities (SSC): a cross-sectorial, transdisciplinary and multi-stakeholder approach
Strategic Innovation Agenda for Smart Sustainable Cities
Government/Public
Academic
Industry in core SSC-sectors
Civil society
City of Gothenburg City of Malmö
City of Stockholm City of Umeå
City of Växjö City of Lund
Growth and Regional Planning Administration, Stockholms Läns Landsting
Region Skåne
Göteborg Region Association of Local Authorities (GR)
Trafikverket (Swedish Transport Administration)
Svenskt Vatten
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Chalmers University of Technology
Lund University
Umeå University
IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute RISE ICT
K2, Swedish Knowledge Centre for Public Transport
SP Technical Research Institute of Sweden
Johanneberg Science Park AB
NetPort Science Park AB
CLEANER GROWTH ElectriCITY Stockholm
Marketing Technology Center (MTC)
WWF Sweden Swedish Union of Tenants
ABB AB, Corporate Research E.ON Sverige AB Electrolux AB Envac AB
Ericsson AB Fortum Sverige Handelsbanken Sweden Hertz (First rent A Car AB)
IBM Svenska AB Intel Sweden Miljöstrategi E&J AB NCC AB
Nobina Technology AB Scania CV AB Siemens AB Skanska Sweden
Sweco Sverige AB
Teknikföretagen (The Association of Swedish Engineering Industries)
Trivector AB WSP Sweden AB Xeric AB
Government/Public
Academic
Industry in core SSC-sectors
Civil society
Focus areas & cross-cutting themes
Intersection of focus areas and cross-cutting themes
Action plan
KIC InnoEnergy
EIT Digital Climate KIC
Horizon 2020 Societal Challenges
JPI Urban Europe
EIP Smart Cities and Communities
Innovation platforms and
testbeds
Urban Futures
IoT SIP Smart Built Environment SIP
Drive Sweden SIP
SSC SIP
Collaborative Pathway 2017-2030
Thank you!
Questions?