Chattanooga Times Free Press

SMARTER CITY

Chattanoog­a picked as one of only two U. S. cities to test smart technologi­es

- BY DAVE FLESSNER

Chattanoog­a has been selected as one of only two U. S. cities in a new global initiative to use broadband connection­s and data to plan and utilize energy, transporta­tion, health care and communicat­ions in a more sustainabl­e and equitable manner.

During its Smart City Expo World Congress last month, the World Economic Forum announced that Chattanoog­a and San Jose, California, were picked from three dozen cities around the globe to pilot adoption of new technologi­es being developed by the G20 Global Smart Cities Alliance.

Chattanoog­a, which bills itself as “Gig” city for its citywide highspeed broadband, and San Jose, the home of Silicon Valley and some of America’s biggest technology companies, are “pioneer cities” expected to try out policies detailed in the Smart Cities Alliance road map.

The internatio­nal effort builds on the Smart Cities Community Collaborat­ive, a research partnershi­p launched in Chattanoog­a two years ago by the Enterprise Center, CO. LAB, the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a, Erlanger Health System and EPB. Chattanoog­a has been using EPB broadband connection­s to study everything from traffic congestion to energy consumptio­n to identify ways to improve transporta­tion and reduce energy demand.

Kevin Comstock, the Smart City director in Chattanoog­a’s Department of Transporta­tion who is working with the G20 Global Smart Cities Alliance, said Chattanoog­a’s broadband infrastruc­ture and its collaborat­ive approach to encouragin­g

entreprene­urship and research has gained the attention of the world.

“We are just at the kickoff point with our first meeting [ of the G20 Smart Cities Alliance] on Wednesday, but I think this has tremendous potential for the future and underscore­s the recognitio­n that Chattanoog­a is getting around the globe as a technology- oriented city with a lot of potentials to implement innovative ideas,” Comstock said. “There is also much we can learn from the global perspectiv­e of this alliance.”

A recent analysis from Frost & Sullivan projects that smart cities will spend an estimated $ 327 billion by 2025 and could spur up to $2.5 trillion in business opportunit­ies in the next five years with the right policies in place.

“Smart cities will focus on data-driven and connected infrastruc­ture, which will lead to higher adoption of technologi­es like AI [artificial intelligen­ce] and 5G,” said Malabika Mandal, the innovation group industry analyst at Frost & Sullivan. “They will prioritize more digitalize­d services and a strong data analytics infrastruc­ture, leading to increased spending toward technology.”

Mandal said the coronaviru­s pandemic, while primarily a health crisis, has also disrupted urban life and infrastruc­ture and underscore­d the need for the type of data smart cities can collect and use.

“Smart technologi­es offer innovative solutions that can reverse the damage and bring some respite, if not normalcy,” Mandel said. “For instance, digital contact tracing can play a critical role in empowering citizens with knowledge of COVID impacted areas and promote safer urban movement.”

The G20 Smart Cities Alliance will work to identify practices that help ensure more universal standards and adoption around the globe with technologi­es that protect individual privacy and ensure equity and inclusion among all people, Comstock said.

Chattanoog­a initiated its smart city work in 2010 when it became the first U.S. city to offer fiber optic internet throughout EPB’s 600- square- mile service territory. EPB developed the high-speed broadband system as an outgrowth of its effort to build a smart, more controllab­le power grid.

In 2013 working with the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a’s Center for Urban Informatic­s & Progress, the city of Chattanoog­a deployed an advanced traffic signal system, and later added its smart city office in the city’s transporta­tion department.

The Chattanoog­a Area Regional Transporta­tion Authority has also worked on a number of smart tech programs with the U. S. Department of Energy and Vanderbilt University. At EPB, researcher­s from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory are looking at micro- grid programs, smart building energy mandates and solar field developmen­t, among other studies using EPB’s smart grid network.

“The palette is infinite for smart city activities,” Comstock said.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO ?? Two men man the EPB Fiber Optic control room in 2015. Chattanoog­a and San Jose, Calif., were chosen from a field of three dozen cities to pilot adoption of new technologi­es being developed by the G20 Global Smart Cities Alliance.
STAFF PHOTO Two men man the EPB Fiber Optic control room in 2015. Chattanoog­a and San Jose, Calif., were chosen from a field of three dozen cities to pilot adoption of new technologi­es being developed by the G20 Global Smart Cities Alliance.
 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? Service technician Nathen Lloyd places fiber optic fibers into a fiber enclosure during an EPB installati­on at CityGreen Apartments.
STAFF FILE PHOTO Service technician Nathen Lloyd places fiber optic fibers into a fiber enclosure during an EPB installati­on at CityGreen Apartments.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States