Huawei builds Smart City Nervous System

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November 28, 2017, Budapest – Huawei has introduced its new smart city concept, which uses leading ICT technologies, on the Huawei Smart City Summit 2017 in Budapest.
The concept connects the digital and physical worlds across city administration, public services and industrial economies. The company’s Intelligent Operation Centre serves as the brain of the smart city, contains the various cloud databases and the omnipresent city networks, that collect, integrate and share city data. With the help of cloud-based computing, Big Data, the Internet of Things and artificial intelligence (AI), the system continuously analyses city services and allows unified coordination and collaboration between them. According to Huawei,
the development of smart cities is unstoppable, mainly due to urbanization.
The company’s income from the market of smart cities can reach USD 4 billion in 2017, and the yearly growth rate of the field can reach 50%.
The Huawei CEE-Nordic region has presented its Smart City concept on the Huawei Smart City Summit 2017, held as part of the China-CEE conference. According to the company, due to the increasing urbanization, by 2025, there will be 27 megacities with 10 million residents, placing extraordinary pressure on public transportation, healthcare services and public services – meaning cities will have to rethink their operation. Cities will have to become smart to keep up with the expectations and needs of their citizens for high quality services and efficient systems.
In order to create a smart city, the digital transformation of the city is of utmost importance.
This needs data-driven systems, which help authorities with the management of the city, and allow the integration of the digital and physical worlds.
„All successful smart city programs must be steered by the leadership of the city, sharing data and information is crucial” – said David Tang. According to the director of the Huawei CEE-Nordic region, we must change the way we share data, in order to allow the interconnection of the departments of the city and allow them to share data. A dedicated smart team is also needed, along with long-term and stabile investments, and city leaders must work together with a leading digital provider that can manage the transformation. This partner has to be open-minded, willing to share its values with other technical partners, and has to create a full ecosystem for the smart city. Huawei is willing to be and capable of being this kind of leading digital partner – said David Tang.
Also, Huawei says that the leadership of the city has to build ubiquitous connections spanning its people and things, and at the same time, link its employees, customers, partners and suppliers together. The city’s operations must be based on big data and artificial intelligence, and needs to automate its business processes with real-time decision making, to realize simple, effective and intelligent operations.
According to Peng Xi, president of the CEE-Nordic Enterprise Business Group of Huawei:
„a Smart City is like a living organism powered by a nervous system.
This nervous system comprises a “brain” [the control centre] and “peripheral nerves” [the network and sensors], gathering real-time information about the status of the city, transmitting the data, enabling the “brain” to analyse and make informed decisions, delivering feedback commands, and ultimately carrying out intelligent actions. This creates a seamless connection between the digital and physical worlds. Huawei is dedicated to building a strong nervous system for Smart Cities with the help of such leading ICT technologies as cloud computing, the Internet of Things and artificial intelligence. Our goal is to be the foundation that supports the robust and sustainable development of Smart Cities”.





