Tap investments via successful partnerships, says Urban Development Minister

NEW DELHI, Feb 10: The Union Minister for Urban Development M. Venkaiah Naidu has asserted that the government's vision on smart cities seeks to ensure socio-economic inclusivity besides promoting employment generation through increased economic opportunity by enhancing the ease of doing business and ‘as such would benefit the poor the most’. He elaborated on the objectives of, and challenges and opportunities in, building smart cities at a Conference on ‘100 Smart Cities : Need for Innovative and Integrated Approach’ organised by the Indian Chambers of Commerce here today. Naidu further said that currently it is the poor and the less endowed who are deprived of equal right and access to public urban spaces whether it is roads, transport systems, water, power etc., and this needs to be changed radically. He also said that poor are the losers on account of weak urban planning and governance structures and smart cities seek to address these deficiencies. Stating that innovative approaches are imperative for building smart cities, Naidu urged the corporates and investors to make a success of the ‘People-Public-Private Partnership’ to meet the huge investment requirement. The Minister said that central government seeks to promote adoption of best practices followed elsewhere while evolving an India-specific model. He said that further to the experiences of implementation of JNNURM, the government is promoting a ‘bottom-up’ approach instead of a ‘top-down’ one by holding extensive stakeholder consultations with all states and others. The Minister also said that while the central government can mostly do hand holding besides providing some assistance and willing foreign countries can provide technical assistance, the states and urban local bodies have to rise to the occasion of building smart cities through necessary initiatives. Nandita Chatterjee, Secretary (Housing & Urban Poverty Alleviation) has said that Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) would play a critical role in promoting smart practices, citizen participation and e- governance for better delivery of services. She however, cautioned that emphasis on technology should not result in technocratic and elitist design. Asserting that smart cities should offer economic and employment opportunities to a wider section of people, Chatterjee said that slum redevelopment, providing houses for all urban poor and skill development of urban poor for increased employment would address the equity dimension of smart cities.

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