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Smart cities will not thrive without national policy support, new Center for Data Innovation report finds

October 30, 2017

Posted by: Zenobia Hegde

Washington, DC

New technologies have created the opportunity to build smart cities capable of collecting and analysing vast quantities of data to automate processes, improve service quality, and make better decisions. With most of the world’s population now living in urban areas, these transformations stand to significantly improve many people’s quality of life.

But local officials cannot achieve this on their own. National governments have an important role to play in coordinating the development of smart cities and ensuring their long-term success, according to a new analysis by the Center for Data Innovation.

This think tank is focused on data and public policy, identifies key barriers standing in the way of smart cities and offers a series of recommendations for national governments to accelerate their transformation and help them succeed in harnessing information technology and data analytics to improve urban life.

“Acting alone, individual cities are not equipped to quickly and effectively become smart cities. National governments should step in to enact policies that enable this transition,” said Daniel Castro, the Center’s director and a co-author of the report. The success of smart cities will depend on the extent to which there are broad policy frameworks in place to kickstart investment in technology and infrastructure, develop and share best practices, and establish interconnected networks to take advantage of economies of scale.”

Daniel Castro

The report identifies five key challenges limiting smart city development: high levels of risk when it comes to making necessary investments, a lack of focus on smart infrastructure, the need for interconnected systems and scale, lagging communities of practice that share information about what works best, and the need to ensure equitable distribution and application of smart city technologies.

To overcome these challenges, the report offers a series of recommendations for national governments to support smart cities.

To mitigate risk:

To spur smart infrastructure:

To enable interconnected systems and leverage scale:

To foster communities of practice:

To ensure equity:

“Technologies will continue to develop that can bring economic and social benefits to communities they support around the world,” said Joshua New, a policy analyst with the Center and co-author of the report. “Any country that fails to support the development of smart cities will be limited in its ability to take advantage of the economic and social benefits cities can offer.”

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