The Civil Engineering Contractor May 2018 | Page 34

THOUGHT LEADERSHIP Smart connections By Eckart Zollner As mass urbanisation continues across Africa, putting in place the fundamental infrastructure needed to build smart cities has never been more important. As infrastructure is rolled out, citizens connect, and services go live, cities will become smarter. S mart cities are emerging in Zambia, Ghana, Mauritius, and Kenya. For all of them, the first hurdle is installing the ICT infrastructure, but the capabilities required to kick-start smart-city services and efficiencies reach beyond ICT. Smart cities don’t just deliver cost savings and efficiencies; creating a sustainable enabling environment can impact economic potential and growth. In Africa, a dearth of infrastructure provides a greenfield opportunity to get it right first time. However, strategic planning will be key to success. 32 - CEC May 2018 ICT may be the core upon which smart cities are built, but getting buy-in from stakeholders to deliver smart services means building relationships, putting in place processes and integrating systems, and implementing the right controls, security, and management systems. This requires an ICT partner with more than just technology skills. A broad knowledge and experience of industry sectors (from utilities to public sector service delivery, manufacturing value chains, industrial operations, and corporate processes) will be essential to co-ordinate, synchronise, and integrate systems and technologies as they converge within a single intelligent city hub. UN studies and other research offer alarming predictions: by 2035, the majority of Africa’s people (over 50%) will be urbanised, more than doubling current urban populations in some countries. By 2030, six of the world’s 41 megacities will be in Africa. By 2050, Africa’s slum population will have tripled. Governments will be highly pressured to keep pace with urban development.