From smart home appliances to connected cars, consumers are increasingly experiencing the benefits of the internet of things (IoT). Although much attention has been paid to consumer and business IoT applications, many people remain unaware of the ways the IoT is delivering positive economic and social impacts, transforming our societies, the environment and our food supply chains for the better. Here are just a few examples:
1. Monitoring And Reducing Air Pollution
Cities account for approximately 70% of the world’s harmful greenhouse gas emissions, despite comprising 2% of the global land area. Each year, more than 3 million people die from air pollution. To change this, cities around the world are incorporating IoT-enabled sensors and devices throughout their infrastructure to monitor air quality and are using the data to implement new urban services that can reduce traffic congestion and associated pollution.
For example, the city of Linz in Austria connected all of its light rail trams and buses to the IoT. More than 500 different data sets — including information on energy usage, acceleration, braking and equipment health — are collected from each tram or bus and delivered to the city’s traffic management center. Traffic management officials used this data to train its operators to drive more efficiently. As a result, the city reduced the energy consumption of the public transit system by 10% and carbon dioxide output by more than 490 tons.
In Oakland, California, tech startup Aclima helped equip Google (a Cisco partner) Street View vehicles with special IoT-connected sensors that measure air pollution levels block by block. As the vehicles map the city, they are also helping scientists identify pockets where pollution is higher than expected, such as specific intersections that have air pollution five to eight times higher than their surrounding neighborhoods. They hope the data can be used by regulators, city planners and health care providers to make changes that will help fight climate change and improve citizen health.
2. Improving Water Conservation
Cities are also using IoT technologies to conserve water. Barcelona implemented an IoT-enabled, smart irrigation system using underground probes placed in parks throughout the city to monitor soil moisture. The remotely monitored devices upload data to the cloud and can automatically open electronic valves, watering the landscaping only when needed and when weather conditions are right. As a result, the municipal water bill has been reduced by 25% and, more importantly, water usage has been reduced.
One of my favorite examples comes from a pilot of smart water pumps by Oxford University in Kenya. In rural Africa, many people get their water from wells using hand pumps, so ensuring those pumps work reliably is critical. The Oxford team installed motion sensors in the handles of these pumps and connected them to the cellular network. When a pump stops functioning, a repair team that is incentivized to make timely repairs is automatically alerted. The result has been a dramatic increase in uptime of pumps and wells. The system also collects water consumption data, which is used to better prioritize and plan the watering system.
3. Feeding A Hungry World
While the world population grows, the amount of arable land on the planet has decreased by 33%. Droughts are becoming more common and the farm labor workforce in the U.S. is shrinking. To address these challenges, farmers are turning to IoT solutions. By installing sensors in air and soil, growers can track microclimates across cropland, closely monitoring temperature, humidity and other conditions in real time. During the recent drought in California, farmers who implemented such solutions reduced water usage by up to 40% without reducing yields.
Others are using drones, robotics, cloud computing, machine learning and other technologies in connection with IoT to improve planting, production and delivery processes. For example, just south of Silicon Valley in the lettuce valley, Driscoll Berries and Taylor Farms are both exploring the use of automation and robots for picking and packing berries to address their sector’s increasing labor shortages and to more efficiently feed an increasingly hungry world.
4. Saving Critical Species
The IoT is not just about connecting devices, sensors and machines to each other and the internet. Even people and other living creatures can be connected. Case in point: bees. Bees are the world’s main pollinator of food crops. However, the global bee population is declining quickly. To help reverse the trend, an international alliance of researchers and scientists is collecting data on bees using microsensing technology.
By equipping bees with tiny backpacks that use radio-frequency identification (RFID) technology, researchers use electronic readers to record the behavior of individual bees. The technology has revealed an unprecedented level of detail about not only the movements of bees but also the factors impacting their ability to pollinate, such as disease, pesticides, air pollution, water contamination, diet and extreme weather. Cisco worked together with the researchers to use IoT technologies to gather data from the hives and make it available for a variety of applications and scientific analysis, in the hopes that we can make the changes necessary to save our most precious pollinators.
IoT technologies are even helping combat rhino poaching in South Africa. Using sophisticated technologies such as a highly secure intelligent network, Wi-Fi hotspots, CCTV, infrared cameras, thermal imaging, vehicle tracking sensors and seismic sensors, Kruger National Park can monitor and track people as they enter and exit the reserve, even if they’re doing so surreptitiously. This is a much less invasive approach than tranquilizing the rhinos to put tracking sensors on them.
These are just a few examples of the many ways that the IoT can transform our world for the better. As internet-connected devices and sensors become smaller, cheaper and more prolific — and as technologies like fog computing, machine learning and advanced data analytics become more widespread — we’ll be able to leverage the IoT in many more new, innovative ways to improve lives, sustain resources and help our planet.
This article was originally published on Forbes.