Eurocities Mobility Forum Thematic Session
Tampere – 18 October 2016
Public Private Partnership for ITS with Open Data (OPTICITIES Project)
Keroum SLIMANI – Grand Lyon
Keroum Slimani - Public Private Partnership for ITS with Open Data - Mindtrek 2016
1. Eurocities Mobility Forum
Thematic Session
Tampere – 18 October 2016
Public Private Partnership for ITS
with Open Data
(OPTICITIES Project)
Keroum SLIMANI – Grand Lyon
2. Tutorial Session #4 – Brussels | 12 Oct. 2016
OPTICITIES PROJECT
REMINDER
| 2
3 years – 25 partners – 13M€
Public and private stakeholders
associate to elaborate
the future of mobility services
4 experimentation fields
– ƒ Urban data creation and use
– ƒ Decision support tools for
network managers
– ƒ Traveller information services
– ƒ Freight information services
3. Tutorial Session #4 – Brussels | 12 Oct. 2016
CONCEPT & OBJECTIVES
Set up a comprehensive data mobility store in European cities controlled by
public stakeholders
Develop innovative services managed by private sector or public
stakeholders using the urban mobility data store, supported by an adapted
contractual framework
3
4. Tutorial Session #4 – Brussels | 12 Oct. 2016
ONLINE TOOLBOX
16 Deployment Guidelines available online
http://www.opticities.com/stakeholder-forum/online-forum/
Example : Opticities provide guidance and recommendations towards
definition of contractual arrangements for Cities to aggregate mobility
data and make it available to Re-users
| 4
5. Tutorial Session #3| 8 June 2016 | 5
Cities objectives
Promote modal shift
Promote new and win-win public and private sector business
models for MMIS ( MultiModal Information Services) : innovative
and independent from public funds.
Approach
Aggregate local mobility data and make it available to third parties
OPTICITIES has defined the contractual arrangements to achieve
that and has worked on the standardization aspects (ITS Expert
group);
OBJECTIVES
6. Tutorial Session #4 – Brussels | 12 Oct. 2016
MMIS architecture and contractual
arrangements between parties
7. Tutorial Session #3| 8 June 2016 | 7
Scope of current
services
• Limited modal, geographical and temporal coverage
• Mostly single mode
Willingness to
pay
• Low due to poor added value of existing services and market context
• End-users take travel information for granted due to free provision
by monopolistic players
Third parties’
access to data
• Open up data is largely accepted
• But sustainable business cases based on Open Data access and
initiatives have yet to emerge
Market
competition
• Monopolies and oligopolies are very common:
• PT operators under exclusive public procurement contracts
• Big internet players providing free services
• Public services provided for free
• In this context pure MMIS players and SMEs have little chance to
exist in the marketplace
MMIS MARKET SITUATION
8. Tutorial Session #3| 8 June 2016 | 8
Cities should arrange mobility data provision to private
partners through contractual arrangements
Cities provide an easy and free access to the Multimodal
Dataset to re-users, intending to stimulate private actors
to enter the MMIS (MultiModal Info Service) market.
They define clear conditions on liability. Re-users
acknowledge the source of data, but are left free to build
services with a wider scope than dedicated multimodal
information.
Cities shall specify their requirements regarding the
conformity of private MMIS with public policy
PROPOSALS [1]
9. Tutorial Session #3| 8 June 2016 | 9
How to foster an innovative and competitive MMIS market:
- Establish a dialogue between the City and data Re-users with 3 topics
1. Collect knowledge on the MMIS effectively built with Data
2. Collect knowledge on new data potentially generated by MMIS
3. Collect feedback on data quality and performance issues of data
provision
- Keep the market accessible to new entrants
Don’t exclude big players but prevent monopolistic situation and avoid a
culture of free-only information
Consider different ways of creating fair and competitive conditions
according to their specific context
Support innovative services to reach a wide audience:
- “territorial brand” under specific conditions or Label of MMIS
- Cities may promote the Re-users’ services on the Cities’ own
communication channels
PROPOSALS [2]
10. Tutorial Session #3| 8 June 2016 | 10
OPTICITIES apps are built on a large Urban Mobility Dataset:
20 millions of data/day on all modes
Example of Optymod travel planner in Lyon launched in 2015 by
GRAND LYON MULTIMODAL DATA BASE
11. Tutorial Session #3| 8 June 2016 | 11
Get information on OPTICITIES partners and activities:
www.opticities.com
Get all public deliverables on line :
http://www.opticities.com/stakeholder-forum/online-forum/
twitter.com/opticities
OPTICITIES group on LinkedIn
MORE INFORMATION
Keroum SLIMANI
Mobility Project Manager
kslimani@grandlyon.com