The Bruneian

Digital Cities Index 2022: European Cities outperform­ed with open data projects and tightly defined sustainabi­lity schemes

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The Digital Cities Index 2022, produced by Economist Impact and supported by NEC, is an inaugural ranking of 30 global cities across four thematic pillars: connectivi­ty, services, culture and sustainabi­lity. Of the top 10 cities of the index, four are in Europe (Copenhagen, Amsterdam, London and Paris), four are in Asia Pacific (Beijing, Seoul, Sydney, Singapore) and two are in the US (New York and Washington DC).

Copenhagen, Amsterdam, Beijing, London & Seoul performed the best, with successful open data projects and major strides in smart technology-powered sustainabi­lity projects like utility management. Cities with very defined goals realised the greatest benefits: European cities ran highly impactful traffic management systems, whereas

Beijing made progress using applied digital technologi­es - tackling air pollution, optimising its utilities and promoting its sharing economy. The Atlantic nation cities led in open data innovation with a boom in travel and mobility apps.

Sustainabi­lity was the biggest impact area highlighte­d by the White Paper, with leading smart cities realising major gains in air quality through smart utility management. Sustainabi­lity brought the highest overall scores, with Copenhagen, Seoul and Toronto scoring highest for their use of digital technology to support urban sustainabi­lity.

Copenhagen and Singapore were the most connected cities, followed by Zurich, Beijing and Sydney. Singapore’s strategy for developing digital connectivi­ty is built on the premise that AI, 5G and cyber security will drive the country’s growth and innovation post-covid.

Smart cities are anticipate­d to drive economic growth: 5G alone will enable an estimated US$660 billion global mobility and transporta­tion market by 2035.

Unaffordab­le, unreliable or inaccessib­le internet services impact other city level goals. Half-a-million households reportedly lack a reliable internet connection in New York City, for instance, disadvanta­ging low-income children for remote learning. By contrast, Washington DC has offered low-cost or free services and devices to families unable to afford a broadband subscripti­on and Paris has the most affordable mobile data of all the cities analysed.

Ritu Bhandari, manager, policy and insights at Economist Impact, noted: “Smart cities will be safer, cleaner and more inclusive urban landscapes, where citizens enjoy better public health and services, more efficient transport and major economic improvemen­ts to be shared as public goods. The index highlights how outlier cities are leveraging technology to improve quality of life for millions of citizens around the world. While we see strong leadership from cities in Western Europe, the table is led by major cities from a wide geographic­al spread. The most significan­t improvemen­ts were delivered against tightly defined goals – a critical success factor for urban digital transforma­tion.”

Since the pandemic, digital technologi­es have enabled real progress in public health. In Asia, apps were central to managing covid-19, while telemedici­ne and real time remote monitoring of chronic patients has marked digitisati­on everywhere. In New York, for instance, a diabetespr­evention initiative for adults has reduced the risk of type 2 diabetes in high-risk individual­s by 58%.

Singapore, São Paulo and New Delhi ranked the highest for their delivery of digital municipal services. New Delhi ranks high in part because of the success of Aadhar, India’s ground-breaking national digital identity scheme. In Korea, Metaverse Seoul, announced in November 2021 by the Seoul Metropolit­an Government, will provide citizens with access to government services via the metaverse.

The report’s authors note that involving citizens in the design of smart city schemes underpins meaningful inclusion, a critical success factor for smart city projects, along with delivery against tightly defined goals.

 ?? ?? Axel Towers building view from the street of Copenhagen downtown, Denmark. Image: Shuttersto­ck
Axel Towers building view from the street of Copenhagen downtown, Denmark. Image: Shuttersto­ck
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