Euralarm recently published a white paper ‘Smart cities: Revolution in every area of life’ presenting the views of the European electronic fire safety and security industry on the topic of smart cities. In a few pages, the document demonstrates the need for safety and security to be better integrated into rankings, performance indicators and standards for smart cities.
The white paper builds upon the current debate on the management of a city’s assets and community services via new net-based technologies, a new paradigm in urban development referred to as ‘smart city’. As a growing global population is rapidly driving cities to their limits, smart cities are seen as the answer to the most pressing questions in modern urbanism.
Issues of shortage and capacity limitations facing cities’ ever growing population apply for traffic or energy supply, but are also relevant to security. The white paper outlines, for example, the existing correlation between the size of a city and its crime rate and densely populated areas’ vulnerability to terrorist attacks or natural disasters. Considering the magnitude of those potential threats the discussion is, beyond security, about resilience.
As ‘smarter’ cities are increasingly digitalising services such as the organisation of transportation networks and other critical infrastructures, protecting this virtual backbone is key to the future development of cities. An urban community can only function properly if normal life can resume as quickly as possible after an incident, claims the paper. It is easy to make the case to see safety and security as the foundation of smart cities.
Central to the discussion on smart cities are various indices built to evaluate how ‘smart’ a city is. Those indices are not only widely divergent but mostly ignore the problematics of security, safety and resilience. They rely on different sets of key performance indicators which are only recently being aligned and defined on the basis of robust standards. A work in which Euralarm Members are heavily involved.
The International Standards Organisation (ISO) has defined in ISO standard 37120 a total of 100 indicators for measuring city services and quality of life. Eleven of them revolve around safety and security. Currently the standard is under revision and more safety and security related KPIs shall be introduced. This makes ISO 37120 the only standard with KPIs appropriate for measuring the degree of security and safety in cities on a comparative basis. The University of Toronto and the World Council on City Data used the standard to offer the possibility to compare on a non-competitive basis smart cities’ performance and to benchmark against each other.