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Opinion | To become a smart city, Hong Kong needs more young people to study geography

  • Geospatial technology that maps our environment can be used for everything from finding the best route for an ambulance to designing a new MTR line
  • It can also help build modern, liveable cities and power a digital economy, but we need people with data analysis skills and geospatial training

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Children take part in an orienteering activity in Tseung Kwan O. Photo: SCMP
If someone has said, back in 1992, that the internet would be indispensable in the future, and that every student would need to master certain computer skills to complete school assignments and even attend virtual classes, many would have considered it a fantasy. Thirty years later, that fantasy is a reality. If we had fully embraced the technology, allocated sufficient resources to train talent, and seized the global market, would Hong Kong be a different, stronger place today?
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Farsightedness is a critical quality for leaders amid fierce global competition. Yet, if we look at education in Hong Kong, the situation is worrying. Elsewhere, cities are moving towards smart development. But what makes a city smart? Massive amounts of data.

That data comes from a variety of connected devices, from smartphones and home appliances to monitoring systems, forming a huge Internet of Things. These devices collect information such as footfall and traffic flows, temperature and humidity, and light levels. Most of the data is location-centric; it tells us things about the sky (atmosphere, satellites), the ground (terrain, buildings, pipes), and the sea (salinity, oxygen levels).

The number of connected devices is growing explosively, with an estimated 46 billion sensors in use worldwide last year, twice as many as in 2016. By 2030, that number could increase to 125 billion.

Sensors on the roof of the Cape D’Aguilar Supersite Air Quality Monitoring Station in Hok Tsui. Photo: Nora Tam
Sensors on the roof of the Cape D’Aguilar Supersite Air Quality Monitoring Station in Hok Tsui. Photo: Nora Tam

In the face of such vast amounts of data, we need efficient tools for organising and analysing, so this information can be used to make comprehensive and real-time decisions. A geographic information system (GIS), which combines geospatial information, statistics, algorithms and modelling, is one of the best tools.

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