WSIS&SDG BlogX
We hear a lot about the challenges and consequences of climate change. We know that cities and urban settlements suffer enormously from it. However, there is less talk in town about the possible solutions. Digital transformation of cities is definitely a potential part of the solution. Cities can use digitalization to improve adaptative actions in response to the looming climate and water challenges while achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. Concrete examples from the ground clearly show precedents of what steps – small or big – could be taken to strengthen climate change resilience which would guarantee a better quality of life for the future.
Continue ReadingOver the past several years, the international community has come to generally accept the indisputable intimate relations between climate change and environmental disasters—they are linked in an exponential spiral. The increase in temperatures worldwide will correspond to a rise in the number and magnitude of disasters. This phenomenon will continue for several years until the global warming curve is irreversible.
Continue ReadingICTs and Disaster Risk Reduction
Over the past several years, the international community has come to generally accept the indisputable intimate relations between climate change and environmental disasters—they are linked in an exponential spiral. The increase in temperatures worldwide will correspond to a rise in the number and magnitude of disasters. This phenomenon will continue for several years until the global warming curve is irreversible.
The COP27 for climate change organized by IPCCC in Sharm El Sheikh on the topic of links between Climate Change and Disasters is generating a lot of expectations. This due to the increasing environmental disasters and by the fact that it is preceded by deceiving results from the Glasgow 26th COP, where many big countries were expected to take firm commitments but decided to postpone any engagement to the next meeting.
On October 13th, I had the pleasure to moderate a WSIS&SDG TalkX in the frame of the WSIS Forum 2023 focused on various best practices that contribute to the mitigation of disaster risk and impact using ICTs and innovative solutions[1]. A very timely debate, not only because it took place on the UN day for Disaster Risk Reduction, but also because it is just a few weeks before the opening of the next edition of the COP on the Paris Agreement.
Ms. Jeanette Elsworth, Chief, Communications, Advocacy, Knowledge Management, and CT at United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction, illustrated the results of a newly released report that showed that the countries where Early Warning Systems (EWS) are not yet implemented are the same where disasters have the greatest impact. She states that "countries that don't have EWS suffer eight times more morbidity when it comes to disasters." This occurs due to the "disasters cascading risk" effect, where disasters provoked by climate change produce other disasters (like in Fukushima, where a tsunami provoked the disaster in a nuclear plant). This phenomenon shows how crucial it is for all countries to be equipped with efficient EWS to protect their infrastructures and their citizens.
The Secretary General of the of the United Nations, Antonio Guterres, and the United Nations General Assembly responded to the issue of EWS in March 2022 with a commitment to install them in all UN countries by 2027. ITU and WMO, as explained by Ms. Vanessa Gray, head of environment and emergency telecommunications divisions at ITU, are the agencies in charge of reaching this objective through collective effort. Mr. Eliot Christian, chief Executive Officer of Alert Hub, explained that, among the various techniques used for early warning, the Common Alert Protocol (CAP) is the most promising and complete since the "standardized structure of CAP enables google and others to deliver these emergency warnings on a range of devices used by billions of people worldwide" making it compatible with all kinds of media and telecom protocols.
Dr. Yuko Murayama, chair of the IFIP WGS15 on IT in DRR at the International Federation for Information Processing, explained how the precondition for an efficient EWS is the comprehension of the characteristics of emergency communication, which she illustrated with the work done by the ITU standardization group WG5.15 on IT in Disaster Risk Reduction.
From the civil society viewpoint, Mr. FanMan Tsang, Director of Capacity Bridging and Technology at the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (CDAC) Network, brought some concrete examples of how CDAC uses ICTs to alleviate the impact of climate disasters. After an analysis of crisis interventions over the past 30 years, the CDAC realized that "coordination and engagement is absolutely critical", therefore the best solutions were those that considered the specificity of the communities such as local language.
The unanimous sentiment expressed by the panel and the debate with the audience was that ICTs could provide a decisive contribution to climate change management and disaster risk reduction. To achieve these results, it will be fundamental to adapt the technological solutions to the communities and to empower the receivers to take –as much as possible- ownership of the proposed solutions.
[1] Invited to the panel to discuss these questions were UN agencies representatives Jeanette Elsworth from UN office for Disaster Risk Reduction, and Vanessa Gray Head of Environment and Emergency Telecommunications Division at the ITU; civil society representative FanMan Tsang, Director of Capacity-Bridging & Technology in CDAC Network; plus representatives of the technical community Eliot Christian, Chief Executive Officer of Alert-Hub, and Dr. Yuko Murayama, Chair of the International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) WG5.15 on IT in DRR.
Manager of the Public Service Broadcasting and Media with 30 years' experience in the news, sport and international relations sectors. Trained as a journalist, with a great deal of experience in international companies and organizations (RAI, Euronews, Eurosport, EBU European Broadcasting Union, and now back at RAI). He has worked for all kind of media (press, radio, general interest TV, all-news channels, Internet portals). Has been among the founders of Euronews in Lyons (1992-1997), then, back in Italy, in charge of the launch of RAI all news channel RAINEWS 24. At European Broadcasting Union has been since 2002 and until 2020, Head of Institutional Relations and of Members Relations South. Currently at RAI he is in charge of the project of follow up of the Next Generation EU plan. Between 2020 and 2022 has been global manager of the UNDRR/WBU project called "Media saving lives", that is aiming to train journalists and media professionals in the 100 countries more exposed to the risks of climate change impact. In this vest has followed the last COP of the Paris Agreement and the GPs on DRR organized by UNDRR.
World Cities Day
We hear a lot about the challenges and consequences of climate change. We know that cities and urban settlements suffer enormously from it. However, there is less talk in town about the possible solutions. Digital transformation of cities is definitely a potential part of the solution. Cities can use digitalization to improve adaptative actions in response to the looming climate and water challenges while achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. Concrete examples from the ground clearly show precedents of what steps – small or big – could be taken to strengthen climate change resilience which would guarantee a better quality of life for the future.
To celebrate the World Cities Day 2022 and as part of the WSIS&SDG TalkX series, ITU, UN-Habitat and Geneva Cities Hub organized a webinar dedicated to supporting cities in improving their adaptation actions to the emerging climate and water challenges in urban settlements through the use of digital transformation. Climate change is a global phenomenon with local effects especially when it comes to extreme weather conditions with heat waves and droughts on one hand and hurricanes and excessive rainfalls on the other. Urban areas are especially vulnerable to the growing risks of climate change.
I had the honor of moderating an excellent multi-stakeholder panel during this special occasion. Speakers represented all relevant stakeholders: cities, city-networks, international organizations, the expert community, and the business sector. They elaborated on the different aspects of the issue and offered solutions that might be replicated or even scaled-up in new locations. They discussed how to best implement digital transformation in cities for effective climate adaptation, including effective water management systems, and shared some specific cases demonstrating how digital technologies are helping cities to become more climate resilient and implementing ambitious water management targets.
Mayor Garcetti of Los Angeles, Deputy Mayor Kannan of Geneva, and Deputy Mayor Gulbinas of Vilnius presented the efforts and achievements of their cities in building a sustainable and equitable future. Digitalization is a policy issue that needs to include social change management. Mayors also shared concrete projects to strengthen climate change adaptation including renewable energy, smart grids, innovative ways of using existing infrastructure, air quality mitigation, solar intensity data sharing, and sustainable urban mobility. Daniela Torres, representing ICLEI Europe, pointed out that our work on digital transformation today lays the foundations for the smart solutions of tomorrow towards a net-zero carbon future. Smart solutions need to take into account the connection among the digital, physical and financial aspects.
International organizations play a key role in assisting cities on the way towards a sustainable and climate resilient future. Bilel Jamoussi and Cristina Bueti of ITU and Graham Alabaster of UN-Habitat offered a broad picture of the ongoing work at the international level. For example, the IoT is enabling cities to collect data for better monitoring of the climate and responding to hazardous situations. AI and quantum computing can help develop the best strategy to cope with these challenges. Digital technologies can be useful tools to provide detailed information to policy makers and effective solutions to mitigate climate change and water-related challenges.
Pavlina Pavlova, from the CyberPeace Institute, reflected on the nexus between the security and human rights aspects of digitalization. When advancing urban digital transformation, cyber security and physical security need to go hand in hand. It is too often considered as a cost instead of being looked at as an investment to a resilient future.
Richard Bowden, head of digitalization at ARUP, shared examples of concrete development project with the audience. The creation of a sponge city, for instance, is one of the concrete solutions to help cities cope with increasingly heavy rainfall and other impacts of climate change. Along the same lines, digital twins are powerful assets that cities can use to carry out high-precision simulations on climate adaptation and water scarcity.
The WSIS&SDG TalkX was a great platform to share experiences and inspirational stories about ICTs for development by stakeholders from all over the world. At Geneva Cities Hub we believe that local action is crucial to successfully achieve the New Urban Agenda, the 2015 Paris Agreement, and the Sustainable Development Goals. SDG11 calls to create sustainable cities and communities, including climate, water, energy, and other environmental and socio-economic urban development aims.
I was impressed by the participants’ awareness-raising on the significance of digital transformation in enhancing climate and water adaptation actions and urban resilience. Each highlighted different aspects of this complex issue; their contributions advanced the global discussion, injected new inputs to the work of the Geneva-based international organizations and strengthened the message that urban digital transformation needs to follow a people-centered approach with aim to increase the quality of life of the citizens while ensuring inclusiveness. I am very much looking forward to bringing this discussion forward at the Mayors’ High-level Dialogue of the WSIS Forum 2023, scheduled to be held on 13 March 2023 at the International Conference Centre Geneva (CICG) in Geneva. The theme of the Forum is "WSIS Action Lines for building back better and accelerating the achievement of the SDGs".
Mr. András Szörényi is senior policy advisor at Geneva Cities Hub where he works on issues like smart cities, digital transformation, urban health and climate change. Before that he worked in different diplomatic capacities in Brussels, covering EU affairs, Washington D.C. dealing with bilateral relations and in Geneva, working with the United Nations and other International Organizations. With a deep knowledge of international relations, he always focuses on new global developments and emerging challenges. He has a broad understanding of the engagement of non-state actors on multi-stakeholder platforms. He has been particularly interested in the increasing influence of non-state actors on the development of international relations since his Ph.D. research. Dr. Szörényi holds a DEA in Comparative Political Sciences from Sciences Po Paris and a Ph.D. in International Economics from Corvinus University, Budapest.