Tools for Network Smart City Management—The Case Study of Potential Possibility of Managing Energy and Associated Emissions in Metropolitan Areas
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Preparation of the so-called metropolitan study. It is a planning document supporting the development of green areas, integrated waste management, rational management of water resources, and electrical energy;
- Integration of public transport organisers. It includes integrating the fare and ticket system, the creation of new connections between cities, and the purchase of zero-emission buses;
- Supporting the accomplishment of tasks by member municipalities through subsidies from the Solidarity Fund, and actions related to policy towards the elderly;
- Promoting the metropolitan association and its area. It considers constructing the metropolis brand and the feeling of identity among the GZM inhabitants;
- Development of a Metropolitan Social-Economic Observatory, a platform of good practices, and an internal management system.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Review of the Literature Regarding Network Management of a City
2.2. Review of the Literature Regarding Conditions for Energy Transformation in Municipalities
2.3. Selected Implemented Projects of the Smart City Intelligent Control Systems
2.4. Research Methods
- What are the most important preconditions determining the development of the GZM as a network of intelligent cities?
- What actions should be initiated for the intensification and networking of smart solutions and the development of 4T creative capitals in the cities of the GZM?
- Which most important changes in the cities of the GZM should be the result of creating, implementing and utilising smart-type solutions?
3. Results
3.1. Research Results—Assessing the Performance of the Hubgrade System
3.2. Research Results—Subindicator: Environment
- the total emission of particulate pollutants per 1 km2;
- the total emission of gaseous pollutants per km2;
- pollutants trapped or neutralised in devices for reducing particulate pollutants (t/year);
- treatment stations with enhanced removal of nutrients;
- the share of parks, lawns, and district greenery in the surface area;
- the surface area of woody lands in the total surface area;
- selectively collected waste concerning overall waste;
- the number of planted trees/1000 inhabitants.
4. Discussion
4.1. Conclusions—Network Aspects of Mobility Management Versus Emission Reduction
- Improve the security situation;
- Contribute to reducing air pollution and noise, reducing the emission of greenhouse gases and the consumption of energy;
- Improve the efficiency and cost-effectiveness of transporting people and goods;
- Have a positive impact on the attractiveness and quality of the urban environment with benefits for the inhabitants, economy, and community as a whole.
4.2. Research Conclusions and Summary of Project Hubgrade
5. Recommendations
- GZM is an area whose features fit the term “conurbation”, rather than metropolis; it is a space whose cohesion is still under construction, and the metropolisation processes occur on a varying scale. However, in this case, one can undoubtedly consider it a polycentric functional area, with strong relationships in terms of a joint labour market, public service market, infrastructural networks, transport connections, or renewable energy sources [77,78]. The completed workshops proved that local managers also look at the emerging metropolis from the point of view of building relationships based on the generation and transfer of broadly understood knowledge. GZM has various potentials, enabling its development towards the networking of intelligent cities. The carriers of intelligence include both the business entities (companies of global significance, local companies active in innovative fields, business surroundings entities), public sector entities (local governments, increasingly open to implementing strategic changes), and scientific and academic entities. Their functioning entails strengthening human capital in the form of creative employees and students, including people who arrive in the cities of the metropolis from abroad. In this context, fundamental significance is attributed to structural transformations occurring in the cities, particularly the shaping of new urban specialisations in fields based on IT. The demographic potential of the metropolis deciding about the possibilities of implementing solutions should be used as a force supporting change, including in the field of infrastructure, based on innovations and digital solutions. The investigated metropolis is characterised by a high level of urbanization, which can be considered a factor favouring the creation of networks of intelligent cities. The GZM is a set of numerous centres of varying importance and functions; in recent years, there has been a noticeable increase in the interest of local governments for initiating various forms of cooperation under the GZM. On the one hand, they are joint projects (among municipalities) of a highly innovative value; on the other hand, there is a visible desire to build structures for lasting integration. Developing network infrastructure (a district heating network, a road network, public transport, international connections, a network of charging stations for electrical cars, etc.) requires institutional coordination. It is also necessary to constantly improve the competencies and awareness of local governments about the essence of a smart city, and to shift the interest from typically infrastructural solutions to initiatives creating cooperation. It is worth developing the application of various tools extending the scope and forms of dialogue with the inhabitants, and introducing modern tools for managing local development, including the participation of the inhabitants. Very high significance can be attributed to actions for creating and implementing tools for the “automated” collection and distribution of data about cities. High usefulness should be attributed to solutions related to the open exchange of data which support decisions related to cities/metropolises as a whole and limit the decision risk of economic entities and inhabitants.
- Although local governments have considerable autonomy in their transport policy and use it when preparing strategic documents such as SUMP, these documents are often not implemented, or/and the organisational and investment decisions remain contradictory to the strategic documents’ assumptions. The authors seek a reason behind such a state of things in the growing complexity of the urban mobility ecosystem and the siloisation of organisational structures. They recommend introducing network management tools and revising organisational architecture, respectively, to increase the level of creative capital of local government employees.
- Emission reduction levels in the area of transport/mobility will depend on the mix of selected tools. The most efficient solutions—active mobility, public transport, and modern forms of shared mobility—require substantial changes in the inhabitants’ awareness and cooperation between participants in the mobility ecosystem, to prepare an attractive proposal of a value constituting an alternative to using private cars. Therefore, it is a necessary step to understand the structure and relationships between participants in a mobility network.
- Improvement in air quality to a considerable extent, especially in the heating season, is possible by reducing low-altitude emissions. The network approach to the management of district heating systems reduces total emissions and increases the attractiveness of system heat, relative to more emission-heavy alternatives, by increasing the technological efficiency and cost-effectiveness using the smart city solutions. Due to its unique position, the GZM can take on the role of an orchestrator, and lead to the partial or complete technological integration of the district heating systems functioning in its territory, providing added value for the inhabitants and heating companies.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Unit Name | Length of the Heating Network | Cubage of the Heated Buildings | Amount of Heat Energy Sold |
---|---|---|---|
Warsaw district heating system | 1847 km (2019) | 341,270 dam3 (2018) | 26,443 TJ (2019) |
District heating systems of the GZM (sum) | 2168 km (2019) | 213,340 dam3 (2018) | 19,731 TJ (2019) |
Emitted Substance | Unit of Emission | Energy Savings in 2019 | Emission Reduction |
---|---|---|---|
CO2 | 84.13 Mg/TJ | 3273.8 TJ | 275,424.8 Mg |
SO2 | 0.11 Mg/TJ | 360.1 Mg | |
NOx | 0.07 Mg/TJ | 229.2 Mg | |
TSP | 0.01 Mg/TJ | 32.7 Mg |
Question | Average Rating |
---|---|
Q12. Does the city have efficient public transport? | 3.37 |
Q9. Does it have access to areas of recreation and leisure? | 3.36 |
Q13. Does it have access to bicycle paths? | 3.29 |
Q7. Does it have contact with science? | 3.22 |
Q8. Does it offer the possibility to enhance qualifications? | 3.18 |
Q16. Is there easy electronic/telephone communication with the City Hall? | 3.14 |
Q2. Does the city have access to modern infrastructure? | 3.14 |
Q3. Does it have access to new technologies? | 3.06 |
Q18. In your opinion, is there tolerance in the City Hall? | 3.00 |
Q15. In your opinion, is the City Hall friendly to residents? | 2.98 |
Q19. Do you have confidence in the competences of the City Hall? | 2.92 |
Q1. In your opinion, is the city in which you live a prestigious one? | 2.87 |
Q14. Do the residents have the possibility to participate in city management? | 2.85 |
Q5. Does it offer appealing job opportunities? | 2.85 |
Q4. Does it have the ability to purchase pioneer products? | 2.84 |
Q11. According to you, is the degree of waste disposal satisfactory? | 2.56 |
Q6. Does it offer high salaries and rewards? | 2.53 |
Q10. In your opinion, is the air in the city clean? | 2.47 |
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Makieła, Z.J.; Kinelski, G.; Stęchły, J.; Raczek, M.; Wrana, K.; Michałek, J. Tools for Network Smart City Management—The Case Study of Potential Possibility of Managing Energy and Associated Emissions in Metropolitan Areas. Energies 2022, 15, 2316. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15072316
Makieła ZJ, Kinelski G, Stęchły J, Raczek M, Wrana K, Michałek J. Tools for Network Smart City Management—The Case Study of Potential Possibility of Managing Energy and Associated Emissions in Metropolitan Areas. Energies. 2022; 15(7):2316. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15072316
Chicago/Turabian StyleMakieła, Zbigniew J., Grzegorz Kinelski, Jakub Stęchły, Mariusz Raczek, Krzysztof Wrana, and Janusz Michałek. 2022. "Tools for Network Smart City Management—The Case Study of Potential Possibility of Managing Energy and Associated Emissions in Metropolitan Areas" Energies 15, no. 7: 2316. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15072316
APA StyleMakieła, Z. J., Kinelski, G., Stęchły, J., Raczek, M., Wrana, K., & Michałek, J. (2022). Tools for Network Smart City Management—The Case Study of Potential Possibility of Managing Energy and Associated Emissions in Metropolitan Areas. Energies, 15(7), 2316. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15072316