Smart cities could lead to cost savings of $5 trillion

Smart city technologies could save enterprises, governments and citizens globally over US$5 trillion annually by 2022.

Smart cities are on the horizon, and will be necessary to cope with the growing influx of people into urban centres around the world.

A new white paper by ABI Research has analysed the scope for cost savings and efficiency as a driver for smart city deployments, smart technologies and the IoT.

It came to the conclusion that smart cities could lead to cost savings of $5 trillion by 2022.

According to the report, the use and deployment of IoT and smart technologies will be pivotal to the future success of smart cities, but only if players collaborate to embrace a holistic approach.

With higher concentrations of people and enterprises in cities as a result of urbanisation, smart city and IoT technology, along with new sharing and service economy paradigms, will be key for cities to optimise the use of existing assets, maximise efficiencies, obtain economies of scale and ultimately create a more sustainable environment. Automation, artificial intelligence, along with sensors, data-sharing and analytics, will all be critical in helping cities save costs.

>See also: What will the smart city of the future look like?

The report further considers the aggregated absolute cost-saving potential for the government, enterprises and citizens in a typical smart mega city of the future (in the next 5 years) with 10 million inhabitants. This is based on the yearly savings achievable for 75 of the world’s cities that have a total urban population of more than 5 million (source: World Atlas).

Key cost savings from the ABI Research report highlight that, in each such typical smart mega city of the future:

• Governments: Could save as much as $4.95 billion annually. Street lighting and smart buildings are two areas that could yield savings, with smart street lights expected to cut repair and maintenance costs by 30 percent.
• Enterprises: A $14 billion cost-saving opportunity exists for enterprises, in areas that include freight transportation by using more energy efficient transport options, such as drones, robots or driverless vans and trucks, and smart manufacturing plants.

>See also: Planning for the future of smart cities and the Internet of Things

• Citizens: Savings of up to $26.69 billion per year could be achieved in areas such as utilities, through the deployment of smart meters and micro-grids, and in education with the development of a hybrid education system (physical and online).

“While smart cities technologies offer multiple benefits, very significant direct cost savings represent a key incentive to embrace urban innovation for city governments, citizens and enterprises alike; this allows building stronger business cases with faster ROI, facilitating project approval and accelerating deployments,” said Dominique Bonte, VP president, Markets, ABI Research.

The report references a B2B technology survey of 455 US-based companies across nine vertical markets conducted in March 2017 in which the companies ranked a list of 11 key benefits expected from implementing innovative technologies. “Reduction in operational costs” barely surpassed “faster and more efficient decision making” as the number one expected benefit, with a five percent margin.

“Smart cities are built upon the Internet of Things (IoT) allowing citizens to reimagine how they work, live and play,” said Rahim Bhatia, general manager, API Management, CA Technologies.

>See also: Smart cities: the concept vs reality

“We’re excited to see quantifiable outcomes being delivered across today’s local governments, with application programming interfaces (APIs) playing a fundamental role in seamlessly connecting the critical infrastructure that makes smart cities a reality. If managed effectively, APIs deliver a number of benefits including the secure exposure and reuse of open data, acceleration of app development velocity, and the expansion of city partner ecosystems, to help maximise ROI and improve decision making across all corners of the new smart city.”

The enterprise

Enterprises within a mega city (a city of with a population in excess of 10 million) could save as much as $14 billion, or 25% of total enterprise costs, with smart city technologies.

“We understand the important role of smart cities for our future, and this report further reinforces how much these will contribute in both economic and social terms,” said Jim Nolan, Executive Vice President, Chordant, at InterDigital.

“But the true potential of smart cities won’t be realised if governments, enterprises and citizens don’t work together in harmony. Doing so will promote the emergence of smart city marketplaces and open platforms, where third-party players are able to ensure seamless integration of new smart city technologies into legacy platforms and systems.”

>See also: 4G and 5G networks are not ready for smart cities

The new report points to several use cases of smart city technology. One example is the oneTRANSPORT project in the United Kingdom, which used the Chordant platform to address challenges in transportation systems with IoT technology.

The oneTRANSPORT project enabled transport information to be shared by a number of stakeholders including transport authorities, municipal authorities, and new third parties, to optimize transport networks across towns and cities.

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Nick Ismail

Nick Ismail is a former editor for Information Age (from 2018 to 2022) before moving on to become Global Head of Brand Journalism at HCLTech. He has a particular interest in smart technologies, AI and...

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