India's Smart Cities
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Government
India's Smart Cities: Smart Move, Long Haul
Visualize a seamless stroll to Varanasi's Sankat Mochan Hanuman Mandir, unconcerned about slipping on water leaking from pipes and drains, garbage strewn across streets, bad traffic or facing unexpected hotel or travel cancellations. This may sound like a dream. Yet, the Cabinet's approval of Narendra Modi's urban regeneration project could turn it into reality. The Union Government plans to spend `48,000 crore on creating a hundred smart cities over five years.
The Prime Minister has already got commitments from Japan, Germany, France, the US, the UK and Canada on helping the plan with their experience and technology. Technology helps maximize utilization of resources by leveraging data collected from sensors, controls, and real time data analytics. It can be used to improve key segments like buildings, which consume 40 per cent of all energy in India, as well as utilities, healthcare, governance, transportation and education. This move could reverse decades of neglect.
Why are smart cities critical in the future? Three-fourths of Indians will live in cities by 2030. The water supply-demand gap will widen to 9,600 crore litre a day from 2,700 crore litre today. Closing that gap is imperative. Also, we lose `60,000 crore on fuel wastage and traffic congestion, which increases pollution by 4 to 8 times. Drivers looking for parking space cause 30 per cent of urban congestion. Cities with networked sensors can help cut transport and parking costs. By upgrading street lights, of which one-third date back to the 1960s, the world can save up to $13 billion in energy each year. New LED lights can fetch savings of up to 70 per cent. Use of smart technology helped Stockholm reduce its traffic by a quarter, cut carbon-dioxide emission by 40 per cent and pollution by 14 per cent.
The Cabinet note says focus for smart cities will be on core services like water supply, sanitation and solid waste management, efficient urban mobility and public transportation, affordable housing, power supply, IT connectivity, e-governance and citizen participation, safety and security of citizens, health and education and sustainable urban environment. It's a huge challenge and will require significant funding and regulatory changes to get off the ground.
Says S Narayan, CEO of Lavasa: "The new regulations need to support smart cities, and reduce challenges, especially on funding. All major components of a city like roads, utilities, waste management, healthcare and housing individually are considered as infrastructure and get due financial support.'' Currently, a city is not considered an infra project, and hence though all these come together to form the city, they don't get any financial support. Smart cities and rejuvenation of cities will not only lay out the path for more liveable cities but also provide the desperately needed growth engine for Indian economy,'' says Jaijit Bhattacharya, partner for infrastructure and government services at KPMG.
Source: New Indian Express
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