The role of smart cities in promoting energy transitions
- Do smart city projects make cities more sustainable?

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On March 21, Marikken W. Wathne and H氓vard Haarstad from SpaceLab held a presentation on the role of smart cities in promoting energy transitions. A wave of 鈥渟mart cities鈥 is washing over Europe, with more than half of European cities with over 100,000 residents currently having implemented or proposed smart city initiatives. These initiatives are characterised by a strong focus on technology, innovation and entrepreneurship, but the concept of sustainability seems to be missing as an important driver.
The 鈥淪mart City鈥 has a flexible framing and . It is usually associated with the implementation of technology in order to solve urban problems with a holistic and interdisciplinary approach to urban planning. This involves smarter and more efficient ways to use energy, to create better public services for the inhabitants and to generate economic and social prosperity in a sustainable way. The use of information and communication technology (ICT) is often as the key enabler for making cities 鈥渟mart鈥.
More than half of the world's population are living in cities today, a number believed to increase to about . Cities keep getting bigger, and Smart Cities is very much a large city phenomenon. 聽In Europe, 51 % of cities with over 100聽000 inhabitants and more than 90 % of cities with over 500聽000 inhabitants are Smart Cities.
In their presentation, Marikken and H氓vard presented results from fieldwork carried out in three EU Horizon 2020 Smart Cities: Nottingham, Stockholm and Stavanger, and tried to answer how environmental concerns are integrated into the 鈥渟mart鈥 solutions.
As an example, the Smart City project in Stavanger was very much about filling the void from the petroleum industry. The need for Stavanger to find new business opportunities and a new niche was combined with the need of improving local transport systems. It built on already existing projects and focused on small improvements or adoption of familiar technologies, rather than innovation through new technological solutions. A similar story was told by an informant in Nottingham when asked why they were doing a smart city project, 鈥淲e are looking for the next steps. We know what we want to do, we haven鈥檛 always got the funding for it, so we are actively looking for funding.鈥
Read more in Marikken鈥檚 and H氓vard鈥檚 presentation below. Also check out the book edited by H氓vard Haarstad and Grete Rusten, kindly given as a gift to the Bergen Energy Lab after the presentation.