Speaker Information Page: "Innovations for Smart Green City: What's Working, What's Not and What's Next"
SPEAKER CHECKLISTfor conference website and printed materialsPlease email all information to yanmei@stanford.edu |
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| Item Required | Date Due |
| Short biography in paragraph format with your name, organization/institution and area of work to be used for the conference pack, not longer than 200 words. | June 8, 2012 |
| Headshot suitably large for printing (at least 350 pixels in both dimensions) | June 8, 2012 |
| Draft Presentation | June 19, 2012 |
| Final Presentation | 9am, June 25, 2012 |
KEY QUESTIONS to be addressed
With the early phases of technologies, products and services now deployed, it is important to take stock. What is working (and what is not)? Why? How can feedback from designers, vendors, and—importantly—users be leveraged for future improvement in design and strategy? In the meantime, what new developments are coming on stream now that are ready to demo or be commercialized that may also significant impact for the next generation of smart green cities?
Topics for Focus: During the “Innovations for Smart Green City” Roundtable, speakers and discussions will focus on an array of questions, such as:
- In the key application areas of buildings and transportation, what lessons have been learned through implementation of smart green products and services deployed to date?
- What are critical bottlenecks for the development of smart green cities? How to overcome challenges, such as facilitating rapid learning, proving financial viability, or integrating innovations into complex systems?
- What frameworks and tools can be used to better analyze and improve smart green cities?
- Which cities around the globe have demonstrated effective smart and green innovations? Which are leading case studies that illustrate lessons on what is effective and scalable?
- What government roles and policies have been effective? More specifically, what role do city representatives have in smart green innovation? What policies have been effective to support Smart and Green industries? What benefits does the government provide to different stakeholders such as developers, investors, entrepreneurs and citizens?
- How is the landscape for smart and green shifting globally -- where are the hotspots or centers of knowledge and excellence?Who are some of the key innovators, labs, firms, and organizations pioneering the way?How can government, venture finance and other crucial parts of the ecosystem help accelerate the development and deployment of high impact innovations?
- And what emerging Smart Green Innovations, firms, and entrepreneurs look promising for leading the next wave of change and even paradigm shift?
N302,Oberndorf Event Center
3rd Floor, North Building
Knight Management Center
655 Knight Way, Stanford, CA 94305-7298
"Innovations for Smart Green Cities" Conference program