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Mumbai Categorized As ‘Sprinter’ On UN SDG Progress

NewsGram Desk

Mumbai is among the world cities that have made significant progress on the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), according to a new global study. Mumbai was categorized as "Sprinter" on the SDG progress along with cities like Singapore, Osaka, and Tokyo. The new "Smart City Solutions for a Riskier World" study showed that while Covid-19 posed significant hurdles to cities worldwide, it also accelerated a wave of innovation that will continue after the crisis.

The study was carried out by ESI ThoughtLab research and sponsored by Oracle, Deloitte, Intel, and others. The research underscores the vital role technology, data, cybersecurity, and public-private partnerships play to ensure a healthy, safe, and prosperous future for citizens in the wake of the pandemic. Conducted in August and September 2020, the research included a survey of senior officials from 167 cities across 82 countries, including in Asia, North and Latin America, Europe, and Africa.

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Cities were assessed and categorized based on progress in two categories: progress in applying smart solutions, with cities being classified as either "beginner," "intermediate", or "leader;" and progress on the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), with cities classified as either "implementer," "advancer," or "sprinter."

The study was carried out by ESI ThoughtLab research and sponsored by Oracle, Deloitte, Intel, and others. Pixabay

Mumbai, Chennai, and Pune were among cities categorized as "intermediate" in applying smart solutions."We are seeing that the more successful cities are focusing on emerging technologies that have a direct impact on service delivery, such as cloud computing, AI, and digital assistants," John Tuohy, Director, Smart Cities strategy, Oracle, said in a statement."Providing remote access to staff and residents is crucial for maintaining business continuity."

The survey showed that 65 percent of city leaders noted the biggest lesson learned during the pandemic was just how crucial smart city programs were for their future. While 43 percent of respondents learned the importance of operational continuity and agility, 37 percent of city leaders said Covid-19 highlighted the need to invest more in upgrading core infrastructure, according to the survey.

About 88 percent of city leaders identified investment in cloud platforms as the most urgent requirement needed for the successful delivery of critical and non-critical citizen services. Moreover, 66 percent of cities are investing heavily in AI and 80 percent will do so over the next three years, especially in the area of digital assistants and chatbots, said the study.(IANS/JC)

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