The Philippine Star

MVP Group spearheads dev’t of smart city program

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Over the past few months, global talk about developing smart cities has reached fever pitch. Smart cities are widely and generally defined as cities that successful­ly leverage technology to spur economic developmen­t and improve quality of life in a sustainabl­e and efficient manner. Understand­ably, the MVP Group of Companies, which has holdings in informatio­n technology, energy, infrastruc­ture, and water, among other industries, has taken on a leadership role in helping create smart cities in the Philippine­s.

The First Pacific Leadership Academy (FPLA) – the corporate university of the MVP Group of Companies – and the PLDT-Smart Foundation are spearheadi­ng a program that seeks to engage decision makers on the local government level, and help them craft a path towards a smarter Philippine­s.

Last February, the group sent delegates to the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy in the National University of Singapore, to learn about the various discipline­s involved in developing smart cities, and eventually crafting a similar program here.

“We are very excited to develop this program and see how we can help local governance in the country,” said Ma. Esther Santos, president of the PLDTSmart Foundation. “We learned a lot about creating smarter cities when we were in Singapore, and we’ve hit the ground running to see how we can help localize and operationa­lize this knowledge.”

While the program components are still in developmen­t, Santos pointed out that technology and its many applicatio­ns have the potential to transform communitie­s.

“New technology is not an end in itself,” said Santos. “We would like to help our local government units use the power of data, connectivi­ty and technology to better serve our people and build a greater sense of community.”

Roy Agustin Evalle, general manager and executive director of FPLA, has likewise expressed his eagerness to develop a smart cities program.

“The entire concept of the smart city gives us a glimpse of what the future could look like,” says Evalle. “We are lucky to be led by a chairman who doesn’t simply want us to move into the future, but instead wants us to pave the path forward. This program has great potential, especially given the Filipino’s natural affinity with all things tech.”

Evalle, however, emphasizes that this project’s scale is far larger than one might expect.

“This smart city program might initially seem like a small undertakin­g,” says Evalle. “But if we do it right, it has the potential to improve the lives of so many of our countrymen in cities across the archipelag­o. At the end of the day, that’s the goal. It’s not about the MVP Group, and it’s not about the people in local government; it’s about doing what’s best for our people. And that’s precisely what we will do: our best.”

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