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By combining technologies as diverse as water recycling, advanced energy grids and mobile communications, smart cities reduce their environmental impact and offer their citizens better lives.
This is not, however, simply a technical challenge. Organisational change in governments - and indeed society at large – is just as essential.
Making a city smart is therefore a very multidisciplinary challenge, bringing together city officials, innovative suppliers, national and EU policymakers, academics and civil society.
The Smart Cities Stakeholder Platform will stimulate the emergence of smart cities by bringing these stakeholders together from across Europe to exchange ideas, launch projects and improve policy. The two main goals are:
- Policy input and analysis: get stakeholder input into how national and EU policies and programmes can best support smart cities;
- Smart City Projects: help cities go smart through both helping cities learn from each other and by generating privately and publicly funded projects.
At the heart of the Platform will be a set of Working Groups focused on detailed policy issues (energy, transport, water and waste management, finance, etc.); a community-oriented website; and a series of physical conferences and workshops, all tightly integrated together.
One of the guiding principles of the Platform will be openness. Anyone will be able to join the Platform and submit relevant content - perhaps a best practice from their city; a project idea for a networking session; or an innovative technical solution.
Another principle, however, will be quality. The authors of the best submissions, for example, could be invited to input their ideas into a Working Group’s recommendation for EU policy, or to present them at the next conference.
Smart cities only happen if everyone concerned is around the same table. We want to reflect this “bottom-up” approach in the design of the Platform itself.
http://eu-smartcities.eu/
http://ec.europa.eu/energy/technology/set_plan/set_plan_en.htm
cooperation
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