The document discusses Japan's "Super City" initiative to promote smart cities. It provides background on Tak Nagumo, Executive Director of the Smart City Institute Japan, which aims to conduct research and training to advance smart cities. It then outlines Japan's "Society 5.0" vision for using technologies like AI, IoT and robotics to address social challenges. The "Super City" initiative seeks to create model smart cities by implementing multiple digital solutions across areas like healthcare, logistics, education and more.
Six Myths about Ontologies: The Basics of Formal Ontology
Japanese Super City Initiative
1. Japanese “Super City” Initiative
January 23, 2020
Tak Nagumo
Executive Director, Smart City Institute Japan
2. 1
Profile of Tak Nagumo
Executive Director, Smart City Institute Japan, Not-for-profit organization promoting smart cities in Japan
Concurrently,
• Committee Member, Japanese Government’s Cabinet Office Regulatory Reform Promotion Council
• Committee Member, Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry Information Sharing Infrastructure Promotion Council
• Digital Government Promotion Officer, Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications
• Senior Managing Executive Officer, Mitsubishi UFJ Research and Consulting, Ltd.
• Researcher, AI Research Center, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST)
• Fellow, World Economic Forum Fourth Industrial Revolution Japan Center
• Japan Representative, Open & Agile Smart Cities (OASC) Japan
• Professor of Kyoto University Graduate School of Management
• Senior Visiting Fellow at Global Communication Center (GLOCOM), International University of Japan
• Fellow at e-Governance Technology Lab, Tallinn University of Technology in Estonia.
3. 2
Smart City Institute Japan (SCI-J)
Name: General Incorporated Association Smart City Institute Japan
Main office: Tokyo, Japan
Establishment: 1 October 2019
Major Activities:
Research: Conduct research on the world’s leading smart cities and produce regular reports
Training: Collaborate with universities and research institutions around the world to organize
seminars, symposia and tours of the world’s leading smart cities
Recognition: Present awards for outstanding smart-city initiatives by organizations and
individuals
Competitions: Create opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students to deepen their
knowledge of smart cities
4. 3
Smart City Institute Japan (SCI-J)
Executive Directors
Noriyuki Yanagawa (Professor, Graduate School of Economics, University of Tokyo)
Takehiko Nagumo (Managing Executive Officer, MURC)
Yoshihiro Hirata (Senior Managing Director, Nikkei, Inc.)
Executive Advisors
Satoshi Murabayashi (President, MURC)
Shojiro Nakamura (Representative Director, Open Government Consortium)
Shuzo Murakami (President Institute for Building Environment and Energy Conservation)
Takao Kashiwagi (Professor Emeritus, Tokyo Institute of Technology)
Takeo Kikkawa (Professor, Graduate School of Management, Tokyo University of Science)
Daniel A. Levine (Senior Country Officer, World Bank Group, Singapore Office)
Mika Yasuoka-Jensen (Founder, Japanordic)
Norichika Kanie (Professor, Graduate School of Media and Governance at Keio University)
Masato Nobutoki (Director, YOKOHAMA SDGs Design Center)
Satoshi Murabayashi
Shojiro Nakamura
Noriyuki Yanagawa
Takao Kashiwagi
Shuzo Murakami
Takeo Kikkawa
Daniel A. LevineMika Yasuoka
Norichika KanieMasato Nobutoki
5. 4
Smart City Institute Japan (SCI-J)
Masato Nobutoki (Director, YOKOHAMA SDGs Design Center)
Noboru Koshizuka
(Professor, Interfaculty Initiative in Information Studies, University of Tokyo)
Masaakira James Kondo (Chairman, International House of Japan, Inc.)
Maki Sakamoto (Professor, University of Electro-Communications)
Kenji Hiramoto (Chief Strategist, National Strategy Office of IT)
Fumiko Kato (CEO, Wamazing, Inc.)
Mihoko Sakurai (Associate Professor, Center for Global Communications, GLOCOM)
Chizuru Suga (Head, World Economic Forum Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution Japan)
Anjyu Ishiyama (General Manager, Secretariat, Sharing Economy Association Japan)
Atsushi Deguchi (Professor, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, University of Tokyo)
Hideki Koizumi (Professor, RCAST, University of Tokyo)
Yuji Yoshimura (Project Associate Professor, RCAST, University of Tokyo)
Yutaka Matsuo (Professor, Graduate School of Engineering, University of Tokyo)
Noboru Koshizuka Masaakira James
Kondo
Kenji Hiramoto
Maki Sakamoto
Fumiko KatoMihoko Sakurai
Chizuru Suga Anjyu SugaAtsushi Deguchi
Yuji YoshimuraHideki KoizumiYutaka Matsuo
6. 5
Social Challenges Require Technologies to Resolve
• As articulated by SDGs and the WE, it has become increasingly evident that the human kind is faced with multiple challenges that
are intertwined.
• The latest technologies, e.g., AI, IoT, robotics, Big Data, and 5G, as typically leveraged in Industry 4.0 and Society 5.0, seem to be the
“last resort” to tackle these challenges human kind has faced today.
GOAL - SDGs MEANS - Society 5.0
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustainable_Development_Goals#/media/File:Sustainable_Development_Goals.png https://www.gov-online.go.jp/cam/s5/eng/
7. 6
REALIZATION - Creation of Smart Cities
Smart Citizens
Cities are physical locations where digital transformation of governments, industries, and other public/social institutions occurs.
Smart Cities
Super City & Smart City
Civic Pride & Dignity
Sharing Economy…
Smart Industry
Connected Industry
Competitive Advantage
Circular Economy…
Top Down Approach:
• Public Philosophy
• Social Contracts
• Data & System Architectures
• System Thinking…
Bottom Up Approach:
• Individual Needs & Wants
• Specific Digital Solutions
• Startups & VCs
• Design Thinking…
Smart Government
National & Local Digital Governments
National & Global Tech Policies
E-Democracy / Participation
Smart Public
Smart NPOs/NGOs
Smart Communities
8. 7
Specific Challenges of Japan
http://www.soumu.go.jp/johotsusintokei/whitepaper/ja/h29/html/nc135230.html;
Decreasing and aging population
Excessive concentration in Tokyo / Needs to rural revitalization
Complex regulatory regimes
9. 8
Society 5.0: Vison for Digital Transformation
https://www.gov-online.go.jp/cam/s5/eng ; https://www8.cao.go.jp/cstp/english/society5_0/index.html
“Be the World’s Most Advanced IT Nation.”
Resolve economic and social problems with new technologies such as IoT, AI, and robotics, in a human-centric manner…
Human Centricity
10. 9
Current SDGs & Smart City Projects
Inter-ministerial collaboration started to more efficiently implement smart cities in Japan.
Public-Private Collaboration Smart City Platform launched.
11. 10
North - Hokkaido and Tohoku
As of 13 November 2019
(出所) 各府省の公表資料をもとに当社作成
北海道北見市
北海道帯広市
北海道下川町
北海道
北海道札幌市
北海道ニセコ町 北海道上土幌町
北海道阿寒地域
岩手県釜石市
気仙沼広域
宮城県東松山市
宮城県岩沼市
福島県新地町
福島県南相馬市
福島県会津若松市
山形県飯豊町
宮城県大崎市
秋田県仙北市
岩手県陸前高田市
福島県郡山市
福島県浪江町・南相馬市
MLIT: Front Runner Model Project
MLIT: High Priority Commercialization Promotion Project
MLIT: Smart City Model Project
MIC: ICT Smart City Promotion Project
MIC: Smart City of Data Utilization Type
METI: Smart Community Demonstration Trials
CAO: Eco-Model City Project
CAO: Future City Project
CAO: SDGs Future City & Local Government SDGs Model Project
METI & MLIT: Smart Mobility Challenge Project
宮城県仙台市
12. 11
East and Mid - Kanto and Chubu
(出所) 各府省の公表資料をもとに当社作成
茨城県つくば市
千葉県柏市
東京都千代田区
東京都豊島区
東京都三鷹市
群馬県前橋市
埼玉県さいたま市
神奈川県
神奈川県鎌倉市
神奈川県横浜市
神奈川県横須賀市
東京都日野市
栃木県宇都宮市
群馬県みなかみ市
神奈川県川崎市
神奈川県小田原市
茨城県日立市
神奈川県川崎市・箱根町
新潟県新潟市
長野県
長野県飯田市
長野県塩尻市
山梨県市川三郷町
静岡県静岡市
静岡県袋井市
静岡県浜松市
岐阜県御嵩町
愛知県豊田市
石川県白山市
富山県富山市
石川県七尾市
石川県珠洲市
富山県
石川県小松市
富山県南砺市
愛知県
愛知県名古屋市
愛知県豊橋市
新潟県見附市
伊豆地域
愛知県春日井市
福井県鯖江市
福井県永平寺町 東京都調布市
As of 13 November 2019
東京都江東区
静岡県熱海市・下田市
静岡県藤枝市
埼玉県毛呂山町
千葉県守谷市
東京都大田区岐阜県岐阜市
愛知県岡崎市
MLIT: Front Runner Model Project
MLIT: High Priority Commercialization Promotion Project
MLIT: Smart City Model Project
MIC: ICT Smart City Promotion Project
MIC: Smart City of Data Utilization Type
METI: Smart Community Demonstration Trials
CAO: Eco-Model City Project
CAO: Future City Project
CAO: SDGs Future City & Local Government SDGs Model Project
METI & MLIT: Smart Mobility Challenge Project
13. 12
West - Kansai, Chugoku and Shikoku
(出所) 各府省の公表資料をもとに当社作成
滋賀県
三重県玉城町
三重県志摩市
三重県志摩地域
三重県菰野町
滋賀県大津市
京都府京丹後周辺地域
京都府京舞鶴市
京都府
奈良県十津川村
奈良県葛城村
京都府京都市
京都府南山城村
和歌山県和歌山市
奈良県三郷町
奈良県広陵町
奈良県生駒市
大阪府箕面市
兵庫県尼崎市
兵庫県加古川市
兵庫県淡路市
兵庫県神戸市
大阪府堺市
徳島県上勝町
徳島県
香川県高松市
香川県瀬戸内地域
高知県檮原町
愛媛県松山市
愛媛県新居浜市
山口県宇部市
島根県益田市
山陰地域(鳥取・島根県)
島根県大田市
広島県庄原市
鳥取県米子市
広島県
岡山県真庭市
岡山県西栗倉村
岡山県岡山市
鳥取県智頭町
鳥取県日南町
けいはんな学研都市
• As of 13 November 2019
広島県三次市 大阪府大阪市
広島県呉市
徳島県美波町
岡山県倉敷市
広島県福山市
MLIT: Front Runner Model Project
MLIT: High Priority Commercialization Promotion Project
MLIT: Smart City Model Project
MIC: ICT Smart City Promotion Project
MIC: Smart City of Data Utilization Type
METI: Smart Community Demonstration Trials
CAO: Eco-Model City Project
CAO: Future City Project
CAO: SDGs Future City & Local Government SDGs Model Project
METI & MLIT: Smart Mobility Challenge Project
14. 13
South - Kyushu and Okinawa
(出所) 各府省の公表資料をもとに当社作成
沖縄県宮古島
沖縄県名護市
沖縄県久米島町
沖縄県恩納村
鹿児島県大崎町
鹿児島県徳之島町
熊本県水俣市
熊本県熊本市
福岡県福津市
福岡県北九州市
長崎県壱岐市
長崎県唐津市
長崎県武雄市
熊本県小国町
福岡県大牟田市 大分県大分市
鹿児島県肝属郡3町
As of 13 November 2019
長崎県糸島市 福岡県福岡市
長崎県島原市
熊本県荒尾市
沖縄県八重山地域
MLIT: Front Runner Model Project
MLIT: High Priority Commercialization Promotion Project
MLIT: Smart City Model Project
MIC: ICT Smart City Promotion Project
MIC: Smart City of Data Utilization Type
METI: Smart Community Demonstration Trials
CAO: Eco-Model City Project
CAO: Future City Project
CAO: SDGs Future City & Local Government SDGs Model Project
METI & MLIT: Smart Mobility Challenge Project
15. 14
What’s the “Super City” Initiative?
https://nettv.gov-online.go.jp/eng/prg/prg6204.html?nt=1
16. 15
From Single to Multiple Digital Solutions
Smart Healthcare (e.g., Remote Healthcare)
Smart Logistics (e.g., Automated Delivery, Drone)
Smart Education (e.g., Remote Education)
Smart Payment (e.g., Cashless Payment)
Smart Mobility (e.g., Automated Driving)
Digital Government (e.g., “Once-Only Data Registration)
Smart Energy Management
Smart Waste Management
Smart Crisis Management
Smart Crime Prevention
Etc., …
More than 5 digital solutions
must be implemented
concurrently to be qualified
as “Super City.
17. 16
Transition to More Integrative Approach
https://www.kantei.go.jp/jp/singi/tiiki/kokusentoc/supercity/dai3/shiryou2.pdf (English translation by SCI-J )
Services
IT Network
Buildings
Transport Network
Surface
Infrastructure
Buried
Infrastructure
Digital Services
(Business Apps)
18. 17
Holistic Architectural Design Approach
Strategy/Policy
Laws & Regulations
Digital Services
(Business Apps)
Organization
(Stakeholders)
Data Platform
Assets
(Data Sources)
(出典:「府省連携によるスマートシティの推進」 平成31年4月 内閣府省察統括官(科学技術・イノベーション担当) English Translation by SCI-J
https://www5.cao.go.jp/keizai-shimon/kaigi/special/reform/wg6/190418/pdf/shiryou3-2.pdf
Interoperability of
Data among Cities
Open Data Area Data Industry Data Private Data
Privacy Protection,
Digital ID,
Data Security
& Governance
PPPP
20. 19
Enhanced National Strategic Special Zone
Designed to fast-track regulatory changes necessary for implementing super cities.
On the condition that citizens’ consensus exists regarding local policies for designing
and implementing “super cities,” local authorities should be able to override national
laws and regulations.
21. 20
Super City in Summary
Showcase “holistic future state” of cities in Japan in 2030
Shift from silo-based solution approach to comprehensive platform-based approach
Use integrative reference architecture to efficiently enable data interoperability
PPPP as fundamental means to implement governance
Enhanced national strategic special zone to facilitate new technology implementation
At least initially, only about 5 cities will be chosen as “super cities”
Both brown- and green-field approaches acceptable
Legislation expected be in effect this spring (cabinet decision completed)
22. 21
Thank you - Any Questions?
Contact:
• Take Nagumo
Email: takehiko.Nagumo@murc.jp
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/takehikonagumo/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/takehiko.nagumo
Twitter: https://twitter.com/TakehikoNagumo
• Smart City Institute of Japan (SCI-J)
https://www.sci-japan.or.jp/English/index/html