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Insgesamt 39669940

Freitag, 18.10.2024
Transforming Government since 2001

GR: Griechenland / Greece

  • Smart City Monitoring Center Revolutionizes Urban Life in Greece

    The first Smart City Monitoring Center in Greece, comprising specially trained personnel called Datagers, has been established and is operated by DOTSOFT AE and e-trikala AE. The Smart City Operations Center serves as the brain of a modern and digital city, integrating and connecting information and processes from various systems. The center is located and operates at the “GiSeMi HUB” Innovation and Entrepreneurship Hub of the Municipality of Trikala.

    Datagers are specialized data experts responsible for ensuring the efficient functioning of the smart city; they are data managers. Datagers are the first in Greece and the Balkans to offer application operations and management services specifically for smart cities.

  • Amazon to assist Greece’s digital transformation

    Amazon Web Services (AWS) wants to be actively involved in the digital transformation of the country after the important steps taken in this direction by both the private sector and the Greek government.

    “Every investment that creates opportunities for more innovation [helps lay the foundations for] a modern, digital Greece that makes the most of the possibilities of technology,” Marina Stavrakantonaki, public policy manager for Greece and Cyprus at Amazon Web Services (AWS), said on Friday.

  • Consortium tests autonomous bus in Greece

    Iseauto is part of the EU-funded Fabulos project to see how cities can use passenger AVs

    An Estonian consortium whose members include Tallinn University of Technology (TalTech) has trialled an autonomous bus which has been declared as “street legal” in Greece.

    A statement issued by TalTech says Auve Tech's autonomous bus carried nearly 400 people across 1,930km of streets over two months in the municipality of Lamia.

  • Coronavirus accelerates Greece's overdue digital revolution

    Pandemic has forced Greek government, businesses and consumers to rapidly embrace online platforms.

    While national lockdowns to stop the spread of coronavirus are ravaging economies around the globe, for Greece, the pandemic is forcing a rapid and long-overdue embrace of digital platforms that is placing Greek businesses and the government on stronger footing to deal with the crisis and its fallout.

    "Remote work is moving forward in leaps and bounds, and could leave us with an important legacy [after the crisis]," says Marco Veremis, a technology entrepreneur and angel investor.

  • Coronavirus edges Greece closer to e-governance

    The coronavirus crisis has forced Greece to take rapid steps to computerize its lumbering civil service and belatedly introduce e-governance in one of the EU's worst digital laggards, experts say.

    After recording its first coronavirus death on March 12, Athens took unprecedented measures totally at odds with its previous love affair with paperwork and red tape.

    Diomidis Spinellis, head of the department of management science and technology at the Athens university of Economics, says that the COVID-19 crisis "accelerated" Greece's digital turn -- though critics say the country has a long way to go.

  • Digitalising Greece with more than EUR 389 million of EU regional funds

    The European Commission has approved three major investments of € 389.4 million from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) that will help Greece's recovery by modernizing the entire public administration, getting both the secondary and primary education systems online and extending high speed internet coverage to more than 600,000 people living in rural and remote areas. These three Information and Communication Technology projects will bring substantial benefits for citizens and are expected to create more than 1100 jobs during their implementation, with 280 permanent jobs created once the projects are fully up and running.

  • e-Trikala: Building a digital city in Greece

    The first phase of the e-Trikala Digital City project, announced in late 2004 by the Greek Deputy Minister of National Economy and Finance Christos Folias, should be completed by mid-2006.

    The first Greek Digital City is being developed under the responsibility of the Municipality of Trikala, with funding from the Greek Information Society Strategy. The e-Trikala initiative aims to improve everyday life by simplifying public transactions, reducing telecommunication costs, delivering new electronic services, and offering new methods to enable citizens to participate in policy-making.

  • Estonia to Help Greece Establish E-State

    Minister of Economic Affairs Juhan Parts and Greek Deputy Minister for Administrative Reform and E-Government Pantelis Tzortzakis met on September 26, to discuss ways of reducing red tape and corruption in Greece through implementing nationwide IT solutions.

    Estonia has pledged to assist Greece with e-government projects, in a memorandum of agreement signed between the two nations on September 9. Digital ID card system, digital signature and other e-government projects, already implemented in Estonia, will be adapted for Greece.

  • Estonia will help Greece to build up e-state

    Estonian economy minister Juhan Parts discussed possibilities of reducing corruption and bureaucracy in Greece with the help of Estonian information and communications technology (ITC) with Greek administrative reform and e-government deputy minister Pantelis Tzortsakis on Monday, the ministry said.

    Parts said that when building up e-state, it is important to observe every state’s peculiarities and create solutions in line with needs.

  • GR: What we know about The Ellinikon, Athens’ upcoming smart city

    With a team of international architects including Norman Foster, Kengo Kuma, and Bjarke Ingels, this is how construction is progressing on one of Europe’s most important urban regeneration projects.

    Ellinikon is currently one of the largest European urban redevelopment projects underway on the coastal part of Athens. With an estimated budget of 8 billion euros, the ambitious project will bring back to life the obsolete site of the Athens International Airport, which operated from 1938 to 2001, before a new one was inaugurated for the 2004 Summer Olympics.

  • GR: 81 services for citizens go digital

    In May 2013, the Deputy Minister of Administrative Reform and Electronic Governance, Mr Manousos Voloudakis, disseminated to all Citizen's Service Centres (KEP) a circular newsletter that provides guidance on the way in which a range of services to citizens – currently 81 – can be handled entirely electronically through the national portal HERMES.

    More specifically, after technical and institutional amendments, the level of services to citizens has been improved for 81 electronic services such as the issuance of certificates, etc. For these services, the transaction between citizens and public administration can now be processed entirely electronically, without the citizen having to visit the required service in person, neither to apply nor to receive a certificate. The standardised procedures can be found on the homepage of HERMES under the heading Electronic Services.

  • GR: Athens deploys contactless payment on public transport

    Athens Urban Transport Organisation has partnered to create a fare collection system that simplifies commuting and makes public transportation more accessible.

    The Greek capital of Athens is rolling out multimodal, contactless payments to improve the public transport experience for both locals and tourists travelling in the city and the metropolitan area.

  • GR: Athens shows how smart cities can do more with less

    Last year, Greece’s capital city, Athens, hired its first Chief Digital Officer – Konstantinos Champidis talks to Smart Cities World about his first 18 months in the job.

    Many cities hired Chief Digital Officers years ago and their smart city drives are well underway. Athens has had other things on its mind.

  • GR: Athens: Lamda to Develop ‘The Ellinikon’ into a Smart, Sustainable City

    Sustainability and environmental protection are among the key planning principles of The Ellinikon, the highly anticipated urban regeneration project in Greece, set to breathe new life into the Athenian Riviera.

    Developed by Lamda Development exclusively with private funds, the project focuses on the coastal front regeneration of Ellinikon and includes the creation of a metropolitan park, residential zones, schools and special utility infrastructures, tourism, sports and entertainment facilities.

  • GR: Billions in IT funding makes little impact

    Just how backward the Greek state is in terms of information and telecommunications technology was outlined by the leadership of the Ministry of Administrative Reform and e-Governance in a recent bombshell press conference, where Deputy Minister Pantelis Tzortzakis described how Greece has spent 7 billion euros on updating information and communications systems since 1996 yet remains the European Union laggard in most indices set by the European Commission’s strategic Digital Agenda 2020 Framework Program.

    “We have spent 7-8 billion euros on telecoms and data processing since 1996 and the result is that not only are we nowhere near the European average, but we are the last or second to last, case by case, in Europe,” Tzortzakis told the press last week, adding that Greece’s performance has actually dragged the EU average down.

  • GR: Digital platform eases dealings with government bureaucracy

    Every adult citizen avoided up to sixty visits to public administration offices in 2021 by logging to the gov.gr digital portal.

    Last year, the integrated public administration systems either provided digital services to the citizens or exchanged information with each other 566,962,980 times, according to the data of the interoperability center of the General Secretariat of Public Administration Information Systems of the Ministry of Digital Governance.

  • GR: E-services aimed at cutting red tape

    A new online payment system set to be introduced by the Administrative Reform Ministry promises to put an end to long queues at banks and tax offices.

    Instead of having to go to a bank or tax office to pay the administrative fee (“paravolo”) required for a range of purposes such as starting a business, obtaining a marriage license or getting a new passport, citizens will be able to simply log on to a government website and pay by credit card or web banking.

  • GR: Electronic prescription system to become operational in all social insurance funds by May 2011

    All social insurance funds will be integrated into the electronic prescription system by 1 May 2011, announced the Ministry of Labour and Social Insurance during a press conference that took place at the end of January 2011. By 2017 the system will be extended to all branches of the national health system and other providers of healthcare services.

    The Memorandum of Cooperation between the Ministry for Labour and Social Security and the National Bank of Greece regarding the 1.5 million grant for the implementation of the electronic prescription system was presented during a press conference. The Minister Louka Katseli stated that prescribing medication electronically is a major breakthrough, which will allow the effective monitoring and rationalisation of insurance funds' expenditures and their transparent operation. Mrs. Katseli added that the extension of the system to all social insurance funds, starting 1 May 2011, is expected to yield savings of around €1.4 billion during 2011. She also stated that the operation of the Social Security System so far has been an 'example of mismanagement, lawlessness and diversion'.

  • GR: Ellinikon: Construction Underway on €8 Billion 'Smart City'

    Construction has begun on a "smart city" three times the size of Monaco, which its developers hope will become a prototype for sustainable development across the world.

    Costing a total of €8.5 billion and covering an area of around 6.2 million square meters, Ellinikon is one of the largest urban development projects on the globe today. When finished, the project will combine thousands of permanent residences, shopping centers, and a commercial hub, all built surrounding a 600-acre public park. While framed by its developers as an paradigm of smart and sustainable urban planning, some experts have cast doubt on whether Ellinikon can meet these lofty aspirations.

  • GR: LAMDA Development Launches Little Athens, the Newest Neighborhood at The Ellinikon

    LAMDA Development is pleased to announce Little Athens, the latest residential neighborhood of The Ellinikon, Europe's largest urban regeneration project and a smart city being built from the ground up in Athens. Amid significant sales velocity across The Ellinikon's residential offerings, Little Athens will bring approximately 1,115 new residences to the sales market in its first phase. Created within the sustainable, smart urban ecosystem of The Ellinikon, Little Athens represents a brand-new residential approach for Athens, embodied in the neighborhood's first 50-meter-tall residential building, Park Rise, designed by acclaimed architecture firm Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG).

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