Digital Technologies and Public Policies Applied to Green Cities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. Step 1—Keyword Co-Occurrence Analysis
2.2. Step 2—Delphi Study to Validate the Technologies Applied to Urban Greening
2.3. Step 3—Public Policy Analysis
3. Systematic Literature Review
3.1. Eligibility Criteria—Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
3.2. Results of the Paper Search
3.3. Data Network and Discussion
3.3.1. Keywords’ Occurrence
3.3.2. Keyword Occurrence Intensity
3.3.3. Co-Authorship Network
3.3.4. Co-Authorship Analysis
4. Delphi Study of the Research Trends That Emerged from the Systematic Literature Review
4.1. Data Analysis and Results
4.2. Data Analysis of the Research Trends in the Technologies Applied to Urban Greening
5. Policy Analysis of Urban Greening
5.1. Policy Analysis 1st Action: Problem Identification Regarding the Stakeholders
5.2. Policy Analysis 2nd Action: Mapping the Dimensions of Policies for Urban Greening and the Technologies
5.3. Policy Analysis 3rd Action: Implementation of Public Policies for Urban Greening
5.4. Policy Analysis 4th Action: Evaluation of the Impacts on Stakeholders
6. Recommendations to Policy
- (a)
- Increase public and private investment, including R&D and digital infrastructure, to promote urban greening.
- (b)
- Support public–private partnerships as successful models for the forced financing of urban greening.
- (c)
- Strengthen collaborative research and innovation projects to facilitate the process of conceiving new ideas, technologies, and processes to render cities more sustainable and greener.
- (d)
- Support the development of new collaborative strategic projects between countries to improve the knowledge and learning process in regard to urban greening techniques and processes.
- (e)
- Implement a strategy to take advantage of emerging technologies for a better quality of life in the cities.
- (f)
- Promote the competitiveness of companies concerned with urban greening principles.
- (g)
- Facilitate innovation in start-ups regarding urban greening projects to transform cities.
- (h)
- Promote the use of artificial intelligence technology, big data, and real-time data to conceive, implement, and monitor urban greening projects.
- (i)
- Flexible regulatory systems regarding urban greening processes and projects.
- (j)
- The transformation of cities based on a greener strategy must be in line with the population needs and aligned with the strategic vision of governments for their countries.
7. Final Considerations
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Keywords “urban green*”, “technolog*”, and “polic*” |
Number of Scientific papers 2,376 |
Number of Scientific papers in Science Direct since 2015 (2015–2021) 172 |
Peer-reviewed journals 99 |
Language English 60 |
Dimensions | Technologies | Authors |
---|---|---|
Urban innovation | Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality | [26] (Affolderbach et al., 2018; 2019) [27] (Aldy, 2016) [28] (Altenburg et al., 2016) [29] (Barbose et al., 2015) [30] (Bergquist et al, 2015) [31] (Birch & Calvert, 2015) [32] (Brudermann & Sangkakool, 2017) [33] (Bryson et al., 2016) [34] (Cavdar & Aydin, 2015) [35] (Chiu, 2017) [36] (Cohen & Bordass, 2015) [37] (Commission, 2001) [38] (Cooper, 1998) [39] (Cowley et al., 2018) [40] (Dal Borgo et al., 2013) [41] (de Boer et al., 2018) [42] (Dey, 2016) [43] (Di Stefano et al., 2012) [44](Drummond & Ekins, 2016) [45] (Dvarioniene et al., 2015) [46] (Dyckman, 2016) [47] (Ferrara, 2015) [48] (Geth et al., 2015) [49] (Giezen et al., 2018) [50] (Hammond et al, 2017) [51] (Hannon et al., 2015) [52] (Hittmar et al., 2015) [53] (Hodgson et al., 2016) [54] (Holley, 2016) [55] (Irga et al., 2017) [56] (Kanniah & Siong, 2017) [57] (Kelly-Detwiler, 2015) [58] (Kim & Han, 2015) [59] (Kulkarni et al., 2017) [60] (Lindman et al., 2016) [61] (Littlechild, 2016) [62] (Manders et al., 2016) [63] (Muscio et al., 2015) [64] (Newbery, 2016) [65] (Peyravi, 2015) [66] (Pitkanen et al., 2016) [67] (Pittens et al., 2015) [68] (Portney et al., n.d.) [69] (Rainville, 2017) [70] (Raja & Wei, n.d.) [71] (Raunbak et al., 2017) [72] (Roper & Hewitt-Dundas, 2015) [73] (Rubashkina et al., 2015) [74] (Ruby, 2015) [75] (Scarpellini et al., 2016) [76] (Schmitz & Altenburg, 2016) [77] (Schweber et al., 2015) [78] (Seeberger et al., 2016) [79] (Sgobbi et al., 2016) [80] (Strachan et al., 2015) [81] (Verhees et al., 2015) [82] (Vermunt et al., 2018) [83] (Wentworth, 2017) [84] (Wright et al., 2016) [85] (Yu et al., 2017) |
Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, and Drones | ||
Green Technologies, Green Energy | ||
Digital Platforms, Green Digital Products | ||
Digital technologies | Artificial Intelligence, Internet of Things, Big Data Analytics | |
Intelligent Systems, Digital Platforms, Green Digital Products, Big Data Analytics | ||
Urban environment | Internet of Things, Blockchain Technology, Smart City Management Technologies | |
Internet of Things, Intelligent Water System Management, Big Data Analytics | ||
Waste Management Systems, Internet of Things, Blockchain | ||
Urban–rural integration | Internet of Things, Intelligent Systems for Smart Agriculture, Green Energy, Drones, and Robotics | |
Internet of Things, Drones, and Robotics | ||
Internet of Things, Drones, Robots, Intelligent Transport | ||
Artificial Intelligence, Intelligent Water System Management, Drones and Robotics. | ||
Intelligent Technology for Heritage Monitoring and Management. Big Data Analytics. |
Keyword | Occurrences | Total Link Strength |
---|---|---|
Renewable energy sources | 14 | 35 |
Technological innovations | 13 | 34 |
Energy policy | 9 | 25 |
Government policy | 9 | 18 |
Sustainable development | 7 | 18 |
Energy consumption | 6 | 22 |
Innovation | 4 | 16 |
Energy efficiency | 4 | 15 |
Economic development | 4 | 9 |
Renewable energy | 3 | 14 |
Carbon and the environment | 3 | 11 |
Public policy | 3 | 10 |
Clean energy | 3 | 8 |
Electric power production | 3 | 8 |
Eco-innovation | 3 | 7 |
Environmental regulations | 3 | 7 |
Stakeholders | 3 | 7 |
Type of Expert | N | % |
---|---|---|
Academics | 14 | 41% |
Practitioners | 9 | 26% |
Researchers | 7 | 21% |
Policy Makers | 4 | 12% |
Total | 34 | 100% |
Technology | Mean | S.D. |
---|---|---|
Artificial intelligence | 6.86 | 0.79 |
Green technologies | 6.65 | 1.04 |
Blockchain technology | 6.54 | 0.98 |
Internet of things | 6.46 | 0.95 |
Water intelligent system management | 6.39 | 0.78 |
Intelligent transport | 6.39 | 0.44 |
Waste management systems | 6.11 | 0.93 |
Big data analytics | 6.11 | 0.67 |
Robotics and drones | 6.10 | 0.95 |
Intelligent systems | 5.78 | 1.20 |
Virtual reality and augmented reality | 5.43 | 0.96 |
Intelligent systems for smart agriculture | 5.14 | 1.03 |
Intelligent technology for heritage | 5.14 | 0.95 |
Green energy | 5.11 | 0.77 |
Green digital products | 4.89 | 0.78 |
Digital platforms | 3.74 | 0.98 |
Public Policies Actions | Description |
---|---|
Policy 1st Action Problem Identification regarding the Stakeholders | Citizens |
Public Administration | |
Companies | |
Society | |
Policy 2nd Action Mapping the Dimensions of Policies for Urban Greening and the Technologies | Map the Dimensions of Policies for Urban Greening |
Identify Technological Challenges and Solutions | |
Policy 3rd Action Implementation of the Policies | Identify Resources Needed, e.g., Funding Programs |
Facilitators | |
Obstacles | |
Policy 4th Action Evaluation of the Impacts on Stakeholders | Positive Impacts |
Negative Impacts |
Dimensions | Public Policy Goals | Technologies |
---|---|---|
Urban innovation | Promote and support the establishment of networks and niches of entrepreneurship and urban innovation at the local level, boosting pilot test and demonstration territories, urban living laboratories, business incubators, and business nests, and promoting the urban integration of business and technological parks. | Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality |
Strengthen the links between cities and their seafronts and riverine and fishing centers, contributing to the blue economy of coastal urban areas in several dimensions, of which blue energy, aquaculture, sport, blue recreation, and coastal maritime tourism and cruises stand out. | Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, and Drones | |
Invest in the green economy as a way of operationalizing sustainable development and focus on the role that public procurement plays in this context, encouraging the adoption of low-carbon strategies by companies and institutions based in the city, environmental protection, and efficiency in the use of resources, and enhancing the innovation, research, and development of business models, production processes, and more sustainable products. | Green Technologies, Green Energy | |
Encourage the adoption of innovative urban solutions of a social and technological nature that can be applied to urban spaces, promoting, in partnership with civil society, the provision of goods and services better adjusted to local demands. | Digital Platforms, Green Digital Products | |
Digital technologies | Design and implement intelligent systems for the monitoring and integrated management of urban subsystems that enhance gains in equity, efficiency, and reliability. | Artificial Intelligence, Internet of Things, Big Data Analytics |
Develop electronic solutions aimed toward the better governance and performance of urban functions, including information and access platforms for public services, citizen participation and collaboration between urban actors, and new models of employment and commercial relations, ensuring their alignment with the specific needs and capacities of the various sections of the population. | Intelligent Systems, Digital Platforms, Green Digital Products, Big Data Analytics | |
Urban environment | Fostering the creation, qualification, integration, accessibility, and readability of urban outdoor spaces, constituting systems of collective spaces, including squares, wooded sidewalks, pedestrian areas, traffic calm zones, vegetable gardens, gardens, farms, and parks, valuing their functions as areas for recreation, leisure, sociability, culture, and sport, enhancing their role in the micro-climatological balance, ecosystems, biogeochemical cycles, biodiversity and landscape, and contributing to green infrastructure. | Internet of Things, Blockchain Technology, Smart City Management Technologies |
Limit urban pressure on water resources, promoting the improvement of urban water balance, water stress management, the rationalization of public, domestic, and industrial consumption, reuse of grey- and rainwater, and the environmental requalification of industrial effluents. | Internet of Things, Water Intelligent System Management, Big Data Analytics | |
Increase the efficiency of the urban metabolism, assuming the priorities of reducing and valuing waste as a resource, expanding the framework of solutions for the reuse and recycling of energy and organic recovery of waste, and promoting the consumption of local products and the fight against waste. | Waste Management Systems, Internet of Things, Blockchain | |
Urban–rural integration | Stimulate the interaction between cities and their rustic surroundings, including agricultural and forestry areas of the hinterland and urban–rural interfaces, exploring the economic, social, and cultural complementarities that result from this proximal relationship, improving transport and logistic conditions, and promoting the supply of regional production, particularly in the fruit and vegetable sector. | Internet of Things, Intelligent Systems for Smart Agriculture, Green energy, Drones, and Robotics |
To prevent the indiscriminate proliferation of dispersed buildings in rustic soils, especially housing, preventing urban economies, and promote the allocation of these soils to productive activities, namely agriculture and forestry, demotivating their abandonment and helping to neutralize adventitious searches and interests. | Internet of Things, Drones, and Robotics | |
Enhance metropolitan wild spaces, creating or requalifying recreational and leisure parks, multi-use forest parks, and route networks in the areas of influence of cities, increasing the awareness of the urban population in regard to natural values. | Internet of Things, Drones, Robots, Intelligent transport | |
Promote investment in urban green infrastructure and urban–rural and urban–urban interfaces based on natural capital and social, economic, and environmental services provided by ecosystems, and promote urban integration, valuing river, lagoon, and marine ecosystems and the related economic activities. | Artificial Intelligence, Intelligent Water System Management, Drones and Robotics | |
Boost the economic and social valorization of natural heritage, protected areas, and areas classified for nature conservation, promoting in an urban environment and the products and services associated with these areas, and reinforcing their fundamental role in the defense of biodiversity and the affirmation of the city region. | Intelligent Technology for Heritage Monitoring and Management, Big Data Analytics |
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Sousa, M.J. Digital Technologies and Public Policies Applied to Green Cities. Land 2022, 11, 2097. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11112097
Sousa MJ. Digital Technologies and Public Policies Applied to Green Cities. Land. 2022; 11(11):2097. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11112097
Chicago/Turabian StyleSousa, Maria José. 2022. "Digital Technologies and Public Policies Applied to Green Cities" Land 11, no. 11: 2097. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11112097
APA StyleSousa, M. J. (2022). Digital Technologies and Public Policies Applied to Green Cities. Land, 11(11), 2097. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11112097