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Lyse Energi upgrades to smart sensors and meters

Lyse Energi, a small power utility in south-western Norway, has been working on a plan since early 2011 to upgrade its meter data management systems and in parallel look for new revenue streams. The new operation will enable more storage of the sensor data that will increase in volume as smart sensors and meters expand in the coming years.

Ovo Energy engages with its customers

For an example of how data can provide a competitive advantage, take Ovo Energy, a start-up company that entered the UK power market in 2009. “As an energy supplier, we’re essentially in retail,” explains Stephen Fitzpatrick, the firm’s founder and CEO. “So we started off from the customer’s point of view”.

CB Richard Ellis’s portfolio focus

Buildings account for around 40% of the world’s energy use. So for a real estate management company with a large, global portfolio of buildings, the focus of attention when it comes to energy reduction is outside its own operations.

To promote energy efficiency, CB Richard Ellis works closely with clients. “Our greatest opportunity is to influence people for whom we manage space or the corporations for whom we work,” says David Pogue, the company’s national director of sustainability for institutional and corporate services.

GE looks for treasure

When evaluating the rationale for identifying energy savings in industrial operations, Gretchen Hancock, General Electric’s project manager for corporate environmental programmes, suggests listening to the sounds a factory makes when it is not operational. “You hear compressed air leaking and you hear pumps running,” she says. If no revenue is being generated, those noises could also be described as the sound of money being wasted.

Banking on bikes

Since July 2010, certain corners of London have become home to a new form of public transport—bicycles for hire. Along with the Transport for London roundel logo in the bikes' livery is the bright blue logo of Barclays, the bank that has sponsored the scheme.

Shrinking cities

Many cities seem to work under an unofficial mantra of "bigger is better". But that's not the case in the Sachsen-Anhalt region of eastern Germany, where the motto of an urban regeneration scheme, International Building Exhibition (IBA), is "Less Is Future".

FedEx in Memphis

With around 30,000 employees in the Memphis area, FedEx is the city's largest private sector employer, while the cargo shipped by the company from Memphis International airport makes a big contribution to the airport's economic impact on the local economy (an estimated US$28.6bn in goods and services and US$8bn in total wages earned in 2007).

The aerotropolis

As transport and logistics companies gather around the world's biggest airports and their related transport corridors, a new urban form is emerging: the airport city. Professor John Kasarda of the University of North Carolina's Kenan-Flagler Business School argues that airports are set to shape urban development in the decades to come. "Show me the busiest airports today and I'll show you the great urban centres of tomorrow," he says.

Infosys in Bangalore

In Bangalore&;s extraordinary transition from a dusty town to a thriving IT hub that is home to more than 600,000 IT executives, Infosys has played a leading role.

Charter Cities in developing economies

Poor governance and corruption are often cited as barriers to growth in developing countries, which are also home to some of the world's fastest-growing cities. But, as any policy expert or development specialist will tell you, retrofitting for good governance is extremely difficult to do. Corruption is hard to weed out once it is embedded in urban institutions, business models and cultures.

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