Inspired by dialogue at the World Smart City Forum in Singapore, 13 July 2016, representatives of IEC, ISO, ITU, IEEE, CEN-CENELEC and ETSI convened at a follow-up meeting initiated by IEC to discuss means of accelerating and better aligning their standardization work in support of Smart Cities. The shared commitment to cooperation resulting from the meeting is expected to assist the standardization community in developing a well-coordinated contribution to the upcoming Habitat III.
Sustained investment in information communications technology (ICT) infrastructure and innovation are crucial drivers of economic growth and development and achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. With over half the world population now living in cities, ICTs, mass transport and renewable energy are becoming ever more important.
In today’s cities much of the infrastructure is installed by a diverse set of suppliers and maintained by different agencies that sometimes work in isolation. The interconnection of city systems will demand standardized interfaces, and this is where standards bodies such as IEC, ISO, ITU, IEEE, CEN-CENELEC, ETSI and others will have an important role to play. For city planners, utilities and service and technology providers, standards are essential enablers in achieving consistent levels of performance and quality, as well as compatibility between technologies.
Representatives of the standards bodies will meet regularly to ensure that their cooperation upholds principles of mutual respect, transparency, openness and sharing of new findings. Over the coming months the organizations will work together to develop a viable framework for cooperation. A follow-up meeting organized by ISO is planned for 2017.
“ITU has a leading role to play as the United Nations specialized agency for ICTs,” said Houlin Zhao, ITU Secretary-General. “The Key Performance Indicators that we have developed for Smart Sustainable Cities as well as our various international standards for the Internet of Things will provide valuable tools to drive the New Urban Agenda and achieve the Sustainable Development Goals.”
“Cities develop and mature in a diverse range of ways, reflecting differences in history, culture, geographic and economic environments”, according to Chaesub Lee, Director of ITU’s Telecommunication Standardization Bureau. “It is a great challenge to identify the common characteristics of Smart Cities in a global sense. However it is clear that essential elements of a city’s ‘smartness’ will depend on information and communication technologies (ICTs).”
IEC General Secretary and CEO Frans Vreeswijk agrees. He said, as a global, not-for-profit organization, the IEC saw the opportunity for greater Smart City cooperation and provided the basis for such a meeting. We are excited about the prospect of more efficient, inclusive standards development for cities. Cities are complex, multi-dimensional systems of systems. No single standards organization will be able to provide everything cities need. Here, as elsewhere, broad collaboration is required. In this context, sometimes one organization will lead an effort and at other times it will share its expertise while another one leads.”

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