The Freeman

Cebu City among pilot cities for ASEAN body

- — Jean Marvette A. Demecillo/FPL

Cebu City has been included in the 26 pilot cities for the Asean Smart Cities Network (ASCN) that will be part of the 33rd ASEAN Summit next week.

Leaders from the 10 membercoun­tries of ASEAN chose Cebu City along with the cities of Manila and Davao.

“The ASCN is envisioned as a collaborat­ive platform where up to three cities from each AMS (ASEAN Member State), including capitals with room for expansion when it matures –work towards the common goal of smart and sustainabl­e developmen­t,” a portion of the concept note of ASCN read.

The primary goal is to improve the lives of ASEAN citizens using the technology as enabler and enhance better mutual understand­ing across cultures.

City Administra­tor Nigel Paul Villarete said the city is included both in the level of challenges and in the level of preparedne­ss.

“Cebu is enduring all the urban woes the world's cities are facing, congestion, waste management, etc. but it has also exhibited the advances it had in the past especially with respect to Official Developmen­t Assistance (ODA),” he said.

Villarete said it was the National Economic Developmen­t Authority that suggested the inclusion of Cebu, Manila, and Davao. He said NEDA knows how Cebu City cooperated and implemente­d ODA projects in the past, especially those which Mayor Tomas Osmeña participat­ed in all Investment Coordinati­on Committee.

He said ASCN will heavily involve ODA so it's not a surprise for Cebu City to be identified.

“Implicatio­ns are, we are now part of a bigger network, the ASCN. That's 26 cities in over a thousand ASEAN cities and we are attracting potential foreign assistance and investors as well,” he said.

Villarete said the city is also currently discussing with the UK Future Cities Programme and the French Mobilize Your City (MYC) Programme for possible collaborat­ion.

There are private technology providers that are coming to discuss new technology and possibilit­ies of joint ventures, he said. Villarete said the more private entities that will assist the city government, the better for the city to get the right and cost-efficient solutions to existing problems.

“The Bus Rapid Transport (BRT) system is at the center of all of these. ASEAN also signed in Bangkok, the framework for sustainabl­e urban developmen­t where the BRT plays a key role in all ASEAN member states. In fact, BRTs are being built right now in many ASEAN cities,” he said, adding that the city could have been ahead in 2008 if there were no opposition­s of the project.

Villarete is hoping that the city will speed things up in the implementa­tion of BRT which has been delayed for one to two years already.

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