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Smart Cities Smart Cities From Concept to Reality From Concept to Reality

An intrinsic union of connectivity, sustainability and profitability An intrinsic union of connectivity, sustainability and profitability
Presented by: Presented by:
Konkana Khaund
Industry Manager
Energy and Environment
Nov 20, 2013
Todays Presenter
Konkana Khaund
Industry Manager, Energy & Environment
Over 15 years of industry experience; 7 years with Frost & Sullivans in Energy
& Environment Practice
Multiple publications in the building technologies and services industry, including
energy efficiency, smart buildings, smart cities, connected homes and related
service sectors
Leadership of consulting engagements with global tier 1 players
Involved with many of the worlds leading building technologies and services
firms in an advisory capacity
Focus Points
What drives smart cities
Key trends in urbanization
Market prospects for smart city segments
The smart city value proposition The smart city value proposition
Business models of the smart city concept
Key takeaways
Resource
Management
Connectivity and
Information
Sharing
Sustainability with
Social
Responsibility
Monitoring and
Diagnostics
Cross-impact of
Diverse Issues
Logistics and
Transportation
What Drives Smart Cities
Global Challenges prompting the need for Smart Cities
Energy Crisis
Green Supply
Chain Management
Responsibility
Source: Frost & Sullivan
Scalable and Agile
Urban Environments
Low Emission
Future
Environmental
Protection and
Security
Diverse Issues
1950s Urbanization
2000s Suburbanization
2020s: Branded Cities
Creation of the historic center and districts
Ring road
motorway, living
areas growing
outside the ring
road as seen in
London
Western Hemisphere will
face an increasing trend of
deurbanization
Urbanization Trends will Impact Smart City Development
Needs from emerging deurbanized cities and corridors will create new challenges and opportunities
2015s Network City
Urban sprawl, first highways and ring road
Third suburban area and cities along the highways
created, ring road overblown by urban sprawl
Emerging urban layouts will have a
tremendous impact on smart city
development in the future
Over 40 Global Cities to be SMART Cities in 2020: More than 50% of
smart cities of 2025 will be from Europe and North America.
Boulder
Vancouver
Toronto
San Francisco
Portland
Seattle
Montreal
St Davids
Clonburris
Gteborg
Hammarby Sjstad
London
Reykjavik Oslo
Freiburg
Stockholm
Paris
Copenhagen
GIFT
Dongtan
Tianjin
Changsha
Songdo
Amsterdam
Boulder
Vancouver
Toronto
San Francisco
Portland
Seattle
Montreal
St Davids
Clonburris
Gteborg
Hammarby Sjstad
London
Reykjavik Oslo
Freiburg
Stockholm
Paris
Copenhagen
GIFT
Dongtan
Tianjin
Changsha
Songdo
Amsterdam
Boulder
Vancouver
Toronto
San Francisco
Portland
Seattle
Montreal
St Davids
Clonburris
Gteborg
Hammarby Sjstad
London
Reykjavik Oslo
Freiburg
Stockholm
Paris
Copenhagen
GIFT
Dongtan
Tianjin
Changsha
Songdo
Amsterdam
Cities built from scratch
Existing eco cities
Existing eco megacities
Treasure Island
Arcosanti
Coyote Springs
Destiny
Babcock Ranch
Curitiba
Bogota
Barcelona
Kochi
Cape Town
Pune
Changsha
Khajuraho
Meixi Lake
Waitakere, N.Z.
Singapore City
Moreland, Australia
Treasure Island
Arcosanti
Coyote Springs
Destiny
Babcock Ranch
Curitiba
Bogota
Barcelona
Kochi
Cape Town
Pune
Changsha
Khajuraho
Meixi Lake
Waitakere, N.Z.
Singapore City
Moreland, Australia
Treasure Island
Arcosanti
Coyote Springs
Destiny
Babcock Ranch
Curitiba
Bogota
Barcelona
Kochi
Cape Town
Pune
Changsha
Khajuraho
Meixi Lake
Waitakere, N.Z.
Singapore City
Moreland, Australia
Masdar
Components that Define a Smart City
The Smart City Parameters
Smart City Dynamics
Smart Infrastructure: Multimodal
transport hubs providing air, rail,
road connectivity to other
megacities.
Smart Technology:
Intelligent
communications
systems connecting
home, office, iPhone
and car on a single
wireless IT platform.
Smart Energy: About 20%
of the energy produced in
a city will be renewable
(wind, solar).
Smart Buildings: At least 50%
of buildings will be green and
intelligent, built with building
integrated photovoltaics
(BIPV); 20% of the buildings
will be net zero energy
buildings.
Megatrends in parallel
industries will influence
core smart city
components and
Smart Cities and Industry Integration
wireless IT platform.
Satellite Towns: The main
city center will merge with
several satellite towns to
form one megacity.
Smart Cars: At least 10% of cars will
be electric, with free fast-charging
stations every half mile.
Smart Grid:
Infrastructure to
enable real-time
monitoring of
power flow and
provide energy
surplus back to the
grid.
Source: Google Images
components and
present opportunities
for participants
The Smart City Value Proposition
Revenue Opportunities
Smart Convergence
Facilitating the smart city value proposition
Smart Buildings
Facilitating the smart city value proposition
Source: Frost & Sullivan
Roles for Smart City Players
Smart City Business Models
The city as the customer
Key Takeaways
What are the implications?
Collaborative project approaches
Convergence of competition
Big data management
New business models
Open Models Consortia Building
Shared Services Digital Infrastructure
Funding Mechanisms
Recommendations
Frost & Sullivans Associated Research
Urbanization and Mega Cities, and impact on industries and business
Strategic Opportunity Analysis of the Global Smart City Market
Next Steps
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For Additional Information
Liz Clark
Corporate Communications
Energy & Environment
(210) 477-8483
Liz.clark@frost.com
Konkana Khaund
Research Analyst
Energy & Environment
(416) 490-2673
Konkana.khaund@frost.com
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Roberta Gamble
Research Manager
Energy & Environment
(650) 475-4522
Roberta.gamble@frost.com
Nils Frenkel
Sales Manager
Energy & Environment
(210) 247-2451
Nils.Frenkel@frost.com

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