Smart cities use technology to create more sustainable urban developments. Great in theory, but creating a solid business case is challenging because of critical uncertainties about which technology will be adopted by the population. The city of Amsterdam is finding this out through its program of 18 pilots (see Verdantix Defining The Sustainable Urban Development Market). It is in this context that on May 26 2011 Fujisawa City announced a partnership with a consortium of nine firms to redevelop a 19 hectare brownfield site located 50 kilometres from Tokyo....
Verdantix Blog
Blog posts for the Smart Cities category are listed below.
Energy Technology And Information Technology Converge In Japan's Sustainable City Project
- Tagged in :
- Smart Cities,
- Smart Grid
New European Funds Available To Encourage Energy Efficient Cities
EU member states are committed to reducing their GHG emissions by 20% compared to 1990 levels, and ensuring 20% of electricity consumption is from renewable energy by 2020. With cities concentrating large amounts of energy consuming assets and transport links, the European Commission launched the Smart Cities and Communities Initiative and the European Energy Efficiency Fund (EEEF) which aim to assist EU member countries in meeting these targets....
- Tagged in :
- Smart Cities,
- Smart Grid,
- Energy Management,
- Carbon Strategy
Partnerships Forming To Unlock The UK Green Retrofit Market
The real estate industry in the UK, hindered by woefully limited data, continues to discuss sustainability from the side lines. For instance of the 1204 properties in the Investment Property Databank’s UK Commercial Office Sustainability Index sample, only 61 had sufficient data to be considered sustainable (based on 21 questions only). Without a significant data set with which to justify investment in sustainability, the market has, by and large, remained circumspect....
Eye On Earth Sets Its Sights On Citizen Empowerment By Sharing Environmental Data
Cities rely to varying degrees on their citizens’ efforts when implementing sustainability initiatives. Motivating mass behavioural changes can be a smart way of achieving sustainability targets at low cost, but a lack of individual accountability can lead to communal inertia and result in low project outcomes. To bypass this issue, several organizations are using IT to bring to life the mass of scientific data available today and reach out to wider stakeholder segments....


