Leading global engineering and lighting industry experts will be in Dubai next month for a first-of-its-kind conference that will explore the advances possible from leveraging Internet of Things (IoT) within the lighting sector and its ability to transform lifestyles.
The one-day conference, to be held on March 5, will be part of the expansive knowledge programme of Middle East Electricity, the world’s largest annual power industry trade platform.
The conference will debut on the show’s first day - at Dubai World Trade Centre - with experts from the Middle East, South America, Europe, India and the US probing the advances possible from leveraging IoT within the lighting sector and its ability to transform lifestyles, said the event organisers.
The pioneering conference will explore how smart lighting solutions - driven by the emergence of the Internet of Things, IoT, in the lighting sector - are on the way to the UAE as the country pursues its aim of developing smart cities, they stated.
Smart street lighting is emerging as a key theme with speakers predicting its impact on the Mena region as the role of lighting evolves from merely illuminating highways to providing social, environmental and operational cost benefits, they added.
Speaking ahead of the event, Scott Fennelly, the director of transportation at UAE-based Solutions Mobility Consultants, believes the benefits for the Emirates are multi-faceted.
"Further enhancements to already innovative smart street lighting solutions
can assist in developing truly Smart Cities," remarked Fennelly.
"These solutions will improve the environment and the sustainability of cities, provide added benefits for the public, and reduce the costs associated with maintenance for various authorities and developers," he noted.
Smart street lights, stated Fennelly, will be perfect bases to collect vital data about urban traffic, pollution, weather conditions and people flow.
Looking further ahead, advanced IoT technologies could see future pedestrians generate power by walking on pressure-sensor footpaths and even the introduction of navigational headsets which will allow the visually impaired to use sensors in lamp-posts to help them ‘hear’ their surroundings as a 3D soundscape.
Conference delegates will also hear of the challenges faced, lessons learned and technical responses to a project in Buenos Aires, which deployed over 150,000 LED luminaires with Smart control to drastically raise the uptime of its public lighting infrastructure while lowering the maintenance and electricity costs, said the organisers.
The project, says speaker Pablo Servent, the CEO of Argentina’s Smartmation, signals the arrival of Smart City lighting as the new norm.
A panel of experts will explore strategies for planning, launching and maintaining a public space IoT lighting system and endeavor to pinpoint where the best initial applications for the Middle East would be, including lighting as a platform for wireless connectivity (LiFi), they added.