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SEIZING THE INTERNET OF THINGS OPPORTUNITY FOR AUSTRALIA IoT – A future of connected things and connected data - transforming industries 99% of things in the world are still not connected 20x Cost of sensors past 10 years 40x Cost of bandwidth past 10 years 60x Cost of processing past 10 years 1 Trillion connected things by 2035 Source: Goldman Sachs 2 WHAT IS THE INTERNET OF THINGS? • Translating the physical world to digital • Collecting, transforming and sharing data • Using analytics to gain insights, find patterns, predict performance, optimise systems • Data-driven user assistance and process automation • IoT comprises • • • • • • Sensors/actuators Communications Data/analytics Applications Visualisation and User interfaces Wrapped in security A technology system that enables digital transformation of industry 3 IOT IMPACT: 1% - 2% UPLIFT OF GDP • This assumes an even impact across most industry segments • BUT this will not happen! However: • Australia can take a lead in focus areas • There are barriers to adoption including regulatory, policy, level of competition, interoperability etc $3bn – $5bn $4bn – $10bn $13bn– $22bn $2bn – $3.3bn $45bn – $116bn per year in 2025 in Australia $2bn – $8bn (incl. agri) $6bn – $17bn $10bn – $14bn $2.5bn – $24bn $2.5bn – $12.7bn McKinsey Global Institute (figures re-calculated to reflect Australian impact) 4 IoTAA – A Call to Action 5 AUSTRALIA’S COMPETITIVENESS IS AT RISK • In 2016 Australia has fallen in the ranks of • the World Economic Forum Global Competitiveness Index from 21st to 22nd . The World Economic Forum says Australia "remains far behind the world's innovation powerhouses“ • the World Economic Forum Global Information Technology report 2016, from 14th to 16th • Many competitors are advanced in IoT • Germany, Industrie 4.0 • UK, Innovate • Singapore, Smart Cities • US – National IoT Strategy plus sector advances in Agriculture and transport 6 Industry Action - IoT Alliance Australia 7 A Broad Alliance IoTAA Executive Council: • Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) • Australian Communications Consumer Action Network (ACCAN) • Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) • Australian Information Industry Association (AIIA) • Australian Mobile Telecommunications Association (AMTA) • Business Council of Australia (BCA) • Commonwealth Bank • Communications Alliance • Creator Tech • CSIRO • Department of Communications and the Arts (DoCA) • Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet (PM&C) Ericsson Hewlett Packard Enterprise Huawei IBM Intel Internet Australia Knowledge Economy Institute (KEi) KPMG nbn Nokia Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC)/Australian Privacy Commissioner • Optus • Telstra • • • • • • • • • • • 8 IOTAA INDUSTRY ACTION IoTAA Board 300 participants from 125 organisations IoTAA Executive Council IoTAA Secretariat Chair: John Stanton (Communications Alliance) Workstreams Collaborative AUS IoT Industry Smart Industries & Cities Open Data & Privacy Spectrum Availability & Licencing Security & Network Resilience Start-up Community Chair: Tristan Masters (KPMG) Chair: Catherine Caruana-McManus (Giant Ideas) Chair: Peter Leonard (Gilbert + Tobin) Chair: Nevio Marinelli (ACMA) Chair: Malcolm Shore Chair: Stuart Waite (Timpani) 9 THREE KEY FACTORS FOR IoT SUCCESS • Collaboration is critical for success • • • Industry/Government collaboration underpins the global leaders today – UK, Germany, Singapore, Japan A healthy ecosystem including academia, industry, Government and investors is needed Big players must work with small players, disruption needs to be supported • Learning by doing – key to innovation and planning • Technology and business model disruption is happening fast • Triggering activity in areas of national interest • Streamlining governance, crossing boundaries to unlock innovation • • Enabling innovation across traditional sector boundaries Open data and analytics offer the keys to opportunity Industry, Government and Research must work together 10 The IoTAA Work Streams Focussing on the major enablers and inhibiters for IoT Industry adoption Collaboration Collaborative AUS IoT Industry Smart Industries & Cities Spectrum Availability & Licencing Open Data & Privacy Security & Network Resilience Start-Up Community Building, informing, educating and catalysing the Australian IoT Eco-System industry, consumer, standards bodies Water & energy resources Associations Research/education IoT service providers Regulators/policy makers Enablers hubs, incubators, accelerators, partners Food & agribusiness Transport Smart Cities 12