"Resilience" – An important aspect of Smart Cities
VARINDIA- INDIA'S FRONTLINE IT MAGAZINE
A high-level industry round table was convened at the India International Centre,
New Delhi on 9th December, 2014, to discuss the importance of
developing smarter, resilient cities in India. The event was the
culminatin of eight years of research and demonstration projects
undertaken by TARU Leading Edge and other ACCCRN partners in India.
The
attendees included Shri Shankar Aggarwal, IAS, Secretary, Ministry of
Urban Development; Shri H. K. Das, IAS, Inter-State Council Secretariat,
Ministry of Home Affairs; Prof. Jagan Shah, Director, National
Institute of Urban Affairs; Usha Raghupathi, NIUA; experts from MoES,
TERI, IIT Delhi, IRADe, SPA, TARU, UNDP, ICRIER, ICF, APCO, CISCO, ICLEI
and others.
Shri
Shankar Aggarwal provided an introduction to the concepts of smart and
resilient cities, outlining the Government of India’s perspective on the
issue. Shri H. K. Das’ remarks addressed the issue of smarter and
resilient cities from the perspective of national safety, security and
disaster management. The panel discussion was moderated by Usha
Raghupathi from NIUA. In the discussion, G. K. Bhat, Chairman, TARU,
mentioned about the smart city projects that have been carried out in
Indore, Surat and Gorakhpur.
The subsequent discussions were wide-ranging, but participants agreed on the importance of the following points:
•
Ensure India’s Smart Cities are also resilient cities: Our
smart cities must be designed to be resilient to physical, social and
economic challenges, address emergencies and stresses. The most urgent
and significant emergencies and stresses being faced today relate to
severe weather conditions and climate challenges. Cities must be able to
respond to adverse events and deliver basic amenities and services in
good as well as bad times to all citizens.
•
Employ smart methods to manage limited natural resources:
Energy and water scarcity are likely to pose additional challenges to
urbanization in India. Smart cities in India, therefore, need to focus
on achieving very high efficiency in water and energy use. Important
solutions will include the conjunctive use of water from local
resources, micro grids for solar energy, green buildings, and the use of
big data and third-party monitoring systems to design water-saving
incentive structures.
•
Use early warning systems to mitigate risks: By integrating
satellite-based monitoring and functional near-real time flood/drought
models, we can significantly reduce disaster-related losses that several
parts of India face every monsoon. The Orissa cyclone and Surat
End-to-End Early warning systems represent successful examples. Early
warning systems can also be used to improve preparedness for heat waves.
•
Provide reliable access to services necessary for compact and
smart cities: Compact cities are less land and resource intensive and
create options for energy and water efficiency. However, a major
precondition for smart and compact cities is the efficient and reliable
24X7 supply of water and electricity.
•
Promote network-informed planning: Smooth flow of information
about lifeline services such as water, energy and traffic is vital to
the efficiency of urban systems. The networks which support these
systems should continue to function even under stress. Networks can
achieve synergies by integrating modular micro-grids with city-wide
systems (so that even if one part fails, it does not affect the whole
system). Cellular systems with some degree of autonomy based on
subsidiary principles, such as mesh-based communication networks and
mobile telephony systems, are ideal for the Indian context.
•
Create an enabling environment for the private sector and
communities: The private sector and communities can play important roles
in promoting resilience. Communities can contribute to local resource
and services management, while Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) can serve as
bulk suppliers and regulatory/monitoring agencies. The private sector is
essential to help meet housing demand and promoting efficiency through
the use of better technologies. The traffic surveillance system of Surat
shows the potential for private partnerships with governments.
•
Introduce community-up planning: There is need to introduce
bottom-up planning starting with the community/colony upwards. New,
context-informed tools, methods and processes need to be developed to
realize the synergies between communities and cities. ULB staff should
also be trained to become bulk service provider-facilitators and
regulators in addition to their current role as retail service
providers.
• Employ big
data for ULB management – regulating urban metabolism: Urban metabolism
is complex and continuously evolving as technologies, demography and the
economy evolve. Cities need to build integrated big data on critical
topics such as housing, infrastructure, services, mobility, economy,
demography and health. E-governance systems, databases, bulk
water/energy consumption, traffic data, etc can provide sufficient
information to manage urban utilities and ensure the resource use
efficiency across the cities.
•
Harness big data to target services and infrastructure on the poor:
To achieve universal access to services, subsidies should be focussed
towards the poor and concentrate funds on infrastructure development.
With the availability of big data on floor areas, location and spending
behaviour, it should be possible to focus subsidies to those who cannot
afford them.
This method along
with differential infrastructure extension fees will enable the
generation of surplus revenue to finance infrastructure expansion, as
well as creating the right incentives to conserve water and energy.
•
Shift the focus of traffic solutions from mobility to access:
“Forced commuting time” can be reduced by introducing mixed and compact
land space usage. Multi-modal origin to destination transport solutions
can also provide comfortable travel between the start and end points of
travel. As temperatures are expected to rise to uncomfortable levels,
totally air-conditioned, minimum wait time travel and transfer
facilities are necessary. Mobile-/Web-based applications can also play
an important role.
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