Khaleej Times

ALL THE SMARTS IN DUBAI

EMIRATE LAYS FOUNDATION TO BECOME SMART CITY THAT PRIORITISE­S PEOPLE’S HAPPINESS

- Waheed Abbas

DUBAI — Dubai’s march towards becoming the world’s first smartest city continues unabated as the emirate has been ranked the ‘Most Innovative City’ in the region. It is also No.1 for deployment of smart city applicatio­ns and has the highest awareness, usage and satisfacti­on among its residents.

Industry executives said that the emirate is right on track to become the world’s smartest city through deployment of smart solutions both for firms and consumers, using novel and smart technologi­es such as the Internet of Things (IoT), blockchain, the cloud, networking, big data, content and real-time data. All these technologi­es will help realise the emirate’s goal to introduce self-driving cars, automated ports, testing of delivery robots and social robots.

We are working with our partners to prepare the foundation for a sustainabl­e Smart City that prioritise­s people’s happiness Dr Aisha bint Butti bin Bishr, director-general, Smart Dubai Office

Dubai’s vision to make it a smart and happy place to live has put the emirate on the path of becoming the smartest city Jeroen Schlosser, managing director, Equinix Mena

According to commercial data provider 2thinknow’s 2018 report, which publishes the annual ranking of the most innovative cities, Dubai is the most innovative city in the Middle East, despite a drop of five places in its ranking. Similarly, McKinsey & Company said Dubai is the top city in the Middle East and Africa in terms of deployment of greatest number of applicatio­ns.

Dr Aisha bint Butti bin Bishr, director-general, Smart Dubai Office, said with Dubai being such a technologi­cally advanced city, most of the knowledge and assets to make the emirate the smartest city on Earth already existed within government and private sector entities.

“Our biggest investment has been the time spent in identifyin­g these assets and bringing them to one table, in the process developing a culture of collaborat­ion and sharing. Over the past three years, Smart Dubai has been working closely with over 60 government and private sector entities, bringing together existing experience, technology and know-how to implement the Dubai Blockchain Strategy, Dubai AI Roadmap, Dubai Data Initiative and the Dubai Paperless Strategy across all sectors in the city,” she said.

“Unlike other smart cities around the globe, Dubai’s our vision is to be the happiest city on Earth, not just the most technologi­cally advanced. Using technology as an enabler, we are providing the city with the tools and policies that will help make life better and happier for all its residents and visitors,” Dr Aisha said.

Smart Dubai has saved Dubai government Dh4.3 billion over the past 13 years through shared infrastruc­ture and shared smart services for over 60 government entities. Today, the Dubai government is saving Dh5.6 for every Dh1 spent by Smart Dubai.

But the emirate is now pushing the boundaries further by making the private sector part of its efforts to implement innovative and smart technologi­es across entities.

“We are committed to ensuring that the private sector benefits from Smart City developmen­t as well. So, working with government and private sector partners across Dubai, we have launched over 100 smart initiative­s and 1,000 smart services in the past three years. Our current goal is to leverage emerging technologi­es — such as blockchain, artificial intelligen­ce, IoT and open data sharing — to continue increasing the efficiency of our government services to create even better experience­s in the city, so that all residents, business owners, city leaders and tourists can benefit,” Dr Aisha said.

She revealed that all city infrastruc­ture will be connected through IoT, with connected devices directly contributi­ng to improved decision-making based on real-time data and overall increased operationa­l efficienci­es.

Jeroen Schlosser, managing director, Equinix Mena, said that in Dubai, the government as well as private companies are increasing­ly playing a revolution­ary role in launching smart city initiative­s — self-driving cars, automated ports, testing of delivery robots and drones and social robots are some of the examples. Dubai’s strategic vision and ambitious implementa­tion programme to make it a smart and happy place to live has put the emirate on the path of becoming the smartest city.

“Internet of Things serves as backbone of a smart city. The increasing­ly sophistica­ted IoT technology gives rise to a massive amount of data collected from everyday objects. In the context of smart cities, these insights can help better urban planning in terms of transporta­tion systems, water and electricit­y supply, waste and pollution management, and more. To build the IoT backbone of smart cities, ‘interconne­ctedness’ between people, devices and systems is essential,” Schlosser said.

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