Beyond Smart: How ICT Is Enabling Sustainable Cities of the Future
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- What are the issues in the alignment of ICT with sustainability in city projects?
- (2)
- How do different stakeholders’ interests in ICT and sustainability vary in the city context?
- (3)
- What are the key roles in the alignment of ICT with sustainability in city projects?
2. Research Background
2.1. Smart Cities
2.2. The Problems of the Smart Cities Discourse
2.3. ICT and Sustainability
3. Materials and Methods
- Issues in supporting sustainability through ICT in the smart city context;
- Different levels of interest/priority in ICT and sustainability;
- Key roles in ICT for sustainability.
3.1. Selecting Participants
3.2. Analysing the Interview Data
4. Results
4.1. The Civic Elements of Knowing
- (1)
- Knowing what is meant by smart and sustainable
- (2)
- Knowing who is leading
- (3)
- Knowing how things fit together
‘European funds are difficult to access, and the enforced cross European aspect makes that local emphasis difficult when actually you want to make it work in your city, your neighbourhood and your district’.
‘…we are talking about 60,000 homes to be retrofitted over 8 years. But when the city has got over 450,000 homes there is still an awful lot to be done… So the challenge with the carbon road map is both to celebrate that we’ve started a substantial journey but also at what point do we build up and accelerate the programme?’
- (4)
- Knowing what needs to change
- (5)
- Knowing who needs to be involved
‘…you have, for instance, the Science Park, … you’ll have the city council and the local enterprise partnership… and you’ll have another board which is Creative City Partnerships. Each of those are looking to do different things around skills and enterprise, but there are a lot of potential crossovers. How do you actually get the benefit of that synergy? ’.(Participant 8)
- (6)
- Knowing through data and information
‘So this discussion is going on saying we need to have a view on what happens when all these people are providing council services, but are not part of the council, because they’re using data and information. And that data and information, one, it may be our legal responsibility anyway so that is an issue, and secondly, even where it isn’t, that’s a value to us because there’s several uses for that, one is the analytical and the understanding about that when you’re trying to push services together’.(Participant 4)
- (7)
- Summary
4.2. The ICT Firm-Related Themes
- (1)
- Knowing the impact of contracts
‘…we are funded to support their IT systems and we respond to change that is required within the city. We also have a responsibility to help drive innovation in the city, so identifying where there are opportunities; and those opportunities may be cost saving, improvement to service, sustainability’.(Participant 2)
- (2)
- Knowing the sustainability requirements
- (3)
- Summary
4.3. The Citizen
- (1)
- Knowing for self-sufficiency
‘You’ve got the city Energy Savers that are going out and doing their retrofits and going into social housing, especially when they’re touching where there’s fuel poverty, how do you link that into social care services? How are you collecting/aggregating that information that sits out there from people that go into people’s homes?’
‘But I think it’s trying to focus the conversation on something that’s relevant to them… Because it’s their understanding, and I think a lot of is around education, you have to understand where they’re coming from and then start to understand what the issues are for them, then you can start to then talk to them about how data, information or technology could make a difference’.(Participant 8)
- (2)
- Knowing for participation
‘I’d say you need a proxy set of translators. In a social sustainable project rather than an environmental sustainable project we work with proxies. So, we will find somebody in say the city Carer Centre—people have nothing to do with IT, …—we use those people to engage with the actual carer to ask them to work with them’.(Participant 7)
- (3)
- Summary
5. Discussion and Conclusions
5.1. Clarify Meaning
5.2. Demonstrate Strong Leadership
5.3. Create Linkages
5.4. Focus on Key Areas of Change
5.5. Involve Stakeholders
5.6. Leverage Information
5.7. Rethink Contracts
5.8. Embed Sustainability in ICT Requirements
5.9. Enable Self-Sufficiency
5.10. Enable Participation
5.11. Research Limitations and Recommendations for Further Research
5.12. Policy Implications of This Research
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Author | Definition | Focus |
---|---|---|
[16] | A city where ICT strengthens the freedom of speech and the accessibility to public information and services. | ICT focus on freedom of speech, information and services |
[17] | A city that gives inspiration, and shares culture, knowledge, and life, a city that motivates its inhabitants to create and flourish their own lives. | People-focused—improve lives through culture and knowledge |
[18] | A smart city looks at all the exchanges of information that flow between its many different subsystems. It then analyses this flow of information, as well as of services, and acts upon it in order to make its wider ecosystem more resource-efficient and sustainable. | Information for services, resource efficiency, sustainability |
[19] | Any adequate model for the smart city must focus on the smartness of its citizens and encourage the processes that make cities important: those that sustain very different—sometimes conflicting—activities. Cities are, by definition, engines of diversity; so, focusing solely on streamlining utilities, transport, construction and unseen government processes can be massively counter-productive, in much the same way that the 1960s idealistic fondness for social-housing tower-block economic efficiency was found, ultimately, to be socially and culturally unsustainable. | Citizen-focused, efficiency, diversity |
[20] | Their smart cities framework consists of eight clusters of factors: management and organisation, technology, governance, policy, people and communities, the economy, built infrastructure and the natural environment. | Management/organisation, technology, governance, policy, people, economy, infrastructure and environment |
[21] | The smart city is a territory with a high capacity for learning innovations, built on the creativity of its residents, their knowledge development, and their digital infrastructure for communications and knowledge management. | Citizen/community-focused, digital technologies and infrastructure |
[22] | A system of systems in which cross-sectoral city system integration has been accomplished, enabling access to real-time information and knowledge by all the city sectors, providing integrated services, and enhancing liveability, workability, and sustainability for the citizens. | Systems integration, connectivity or the processes and data, future sustainable cities |
[23] | A smart city is a sustainable city that solves urban problems and improves citizens’ quality of life through the fourth industrial revolution, technology and governance between stakeholders | Smart sustainable cities, industry 4.0, governance and digital technology |
Participant | Participant Type |
---|---|
Participant 1 | Strategic Development |
Participant 2 | ICT Innovation |
Participant 3 | ICT Solutions |
Participant 4 | Information Strategy |
Participant 5 | Environmental Sustainability Strategy |
Participant 6 | ICT Strategy |
Participant 7 | ICT Strategy |
Participant 8 | ICT Strategy |
Participant 9 | Pilot (Sustainability and Technology Expert) |
Participant 10 | Pilot (ICT Expert/Advisor to Local Governments) |
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Shah, H. Beyond Smart: How ICT Is Enabling Sustainable Cities of the Future. Sustainability 2023, 15, 12381. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151612381
Shah H. Beyond Smart: How ICT Is Enabling Sustainable Cities of the Future. Sustainability. 2023; 15(16):12381. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151612381
Chicago/Turabian StyleShah, Hanifa. 2023. "Beyond Smart: How ICT Is Enabling Sustainable Cities of the Future" Sustainability 15, no. 16: 12381. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151612381
APA StyleShah, H. (2023). Beyond Smart: How ICT Is Enabling Sustainable Cities of the Future. Sustainability, 15(16), 12381. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151612381