Christchurch Earns IBM Smarter Cities Challenge Grant
Christchurch Earns IBM Smarter Cities Challenge Grant
for 2013
Christchurch, New Zealand, 15 November 2012 - IBM
(NYSE: IBM) today
announced Christchurch has been
selected as a recipient of an IBM Smarter
Cities
Challenge grant (#smartercities) one of 31 cities globally
for
2013. The grant provides Christchurch with access to
some of IBM's top
experts to analyse and provide
recommendations to drive economic
development and
sustained growth for the city.
Launched in 2011, the IBM
Smarter Cities Challenge is a three-year,
100-city,
US$50-million competitive grant program and is
IBM's
single-largest philanthropic initiative. The
Challenge teams address urban
issues including economic
development, transportation, education, energy,
public
safety, urban planning and health care. As part of the pro
bono
engagement, a team of six IBM experts will be
assigned to Christchurch in
2013, working with
Christchurch City Council and the Canterbury
Development
Corporation.
Canterbury Development
Corporation chief executive, Mr Tom Hooper said,
“Our
vision for this project is to create a ‘smart framework’
that will
improve the city’s innovation eco-system and
help create opportunities for
both collaboration and
commercialisation of ideas. By understanding
and
implementing such a framework, it is anticipated that
the city would
generate higher levels of economic growth
across all sectors following a
sustained period of
earthquake-related rebuild activity.”
The Canterbury
Development Corporation’s application was
officially
endorsed by Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker, who
was also participated in the
grant application
process.
“When talking about a re-imagined Christchurch,
I have always envisaged
collaborative projects such as
the IBM Smarter Cities Challenge helping us
create a
dynamic and innovative society. To be chosen as one of the
IBM
Smarter Cities grant recipients is both an honour and
dynamic opportunity
that speaks to our innovators,
engineers, entrepreneurs and scientists with
the clear
message that we are building a city of the future,” said
Mayor
Parker.
“We are thrilled that a New Zealand
city has been selected in this
competitive grant program
. Christchurch put forward a clear and compelling
case to
receive a grant andit will be a privilege to collaborate
with
Christchurch and its leaders to help the city
develop a sustained model for
economic prosperity," said
Liz Hampton, Corporate Citizenship and Corporate
Affairs
Manager, IBM New Zealand.
In 2012, IBM provided expert
counsel to 33 cities worldwide who had earned
IBM Smarter
Cities Challenge grants. These included engagements in:
• Geraldton, Australia, where IBM suggested ways for the
city to become
a leader in smart grid technology
adoption and digital services
• Cheongju, Korea,
where IBM recommended smarter transportation
strategies
• Dortmund, Germany, and Malaga Spain,
where IBM formulated plans for
economic, workforce,
and skills development
• Jacksonville, USA, where
IBM outlined steps for downtown
revitalization
• Louisville, USA, where IBM showed how the city could use
data to
identify, predict and mitigate conditions
that trigger asthma
• Nairobi, Kenya, where IBM
created a plan for traffic management
• Curitaba,
Brazil, where IBM suggested approaches to sustainability
and citizen engagement.
In year-one and two of the Smarter
Cities Challenge, IBM completed work in
62 cities
globally, deploying nearly 400 of its most talented experts
who
delivered concrete and measurable results to winning
cities.
The need to use innovative approaches that address
civic challenges has
never been greater. In 2008,
according to the United Nations, more than
half the
world's population began living in cities for the first
time.
These population centers are more economically
powerful, politically
influential, and technologically
advanced than at any time in history. But
they also
struggle with increased demand for services, along with
budgetary
and operational challenges.
Smarter Cities
Challenge is a variant of IBM's Corporate Service Corps,
a
pro bono consulting program that assists government
with projects that
intersect business, technology, and
society. Since its launch in 2008,
Corporate Service
Corps has sent more than 2,000 of IBM's top talent
based
in 50 countries on more than 200 team assignments
in 30 countries. While
Corporate Service Corps focuses
on the developing world, IBM's Smarter
Cities Challenge
addresses urban concerns in both industrialized
and
developing countries.
Visit the CitizenIBM blog to
read about some of the lessons learned during
previous
IBM Smarter Cities Challenge engagements, and to better
understand
the challenges that cities face.
The Smarter
Cities Challenge is sponsored by IBM's Corporate
Citizenship
program and IBM’s International Foundation.
IBM has been a leader in
corporate social responsibility
and citizenship for more than 100 years.
To learn more
about IBM's corporate citizenship initiatives, visit:
http://www.citizenibm.com and http://www.youtube.com/user/citizenIBM.
To
find out more about IBM Smarter Cities Challenge
grants, please visit IBM’s
Smarter Cities Challenge web
site at www.smartercitieschallenge.org.
Follow
us on Twitter @citizenIBM
ENDS