• Home
  • AER Elections 2025 – Shape the Future of Our Network
    • Call for amendments – AER Political Priorities 2025-2030
  • About
    • Governance & Structure
      • AER Procedures
      • Statute & strategies
      • The AER Executive Board
      • The AER Secretariat
    • AER stands with Ukraine
    • The History of AER
  • Members
    • Who are AER’s members?
    • Member Directory
    • Join AER!
  • Mutual Learning
    • About Mutual Learning
    • Knowledge Transfer Events
    • Working Groups
      • Ongoing Working Groups
      • Past Working Groups
  • Advocacy
    • About Our Advocacy Work
    • The Bureau
    • The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
    • AER Political Priorities 2020-2025
  • Projects
    • About Our Projects
    • Ongoing Projects
    • Look for Partners
    • Completed Projects
  • AER Programmes
    • Eurodyssey – A traineeship mobility programme for young people, entirely managed at regional level
    • Intercultural Regions Network
    • AER SUMMER ACADEMY
    • AER Youth Regional Network (YRN)
  • Events
    • AER Event Calendar
    • AER events
    • Other events

Assembly of European Regions

Connecting regions, inspiring Europe since 1985

You are here: Home / Structure / Mutual Learning / Public open data in the spotlight at Vojvodina plenaries

Public open data in the spotlight at Vojvodina plenaries

9 July, 2018 By Johanna Pacevicius

Facebooktwitterlinkedinmail
Share this!

On the occasion of the Autumn plenaries in Vojvodina, AER members will discuss how opening public data supports the emergence of startups in regions. The panel will bring together speakers from startups, regional policymakers, experts on design and data to discuss why, how and for what regions should open their data and look at challenges and opportunities.

Open Data… why?

Everyday, public institutions collect and generate enormous quantities of data in areas as varied as unemployment, air pollution, hospital consultations, trends in construction, petrol & diesel prices, wood harvesting, production of organic milk or the evolution of criminality. This data can be re-used to create or improve services both private and public.

  • Innovation: access to reusable data inspires innovative services and new business models. For the period 2016-2020, the market size for Open Data is estimated to be 325 billion EUR.
  • Transparency: publishing data about processes, spendings, priorities, use of services, outputs, and making it accessible is an essential part to improve transparency and governance
  • Efficiency: by using Open Data, Member States are forecasted to make 1.7 billion EUR in efficiency savings by 2020.

From pollution tracking to employment

Examples of data re-use include for instance the tracking of hourly pollution levels in sixty cities in the world by Plume Labs. This French startup uses data made public by different agencies engaged in a policy of Open Data, such as Airparif in Paris to feed its air pollution forecast app and help citizens better chose the times and places they cycle, work out or play outside with their children.

Another startup, Sun Energia in Finland uses open meteorological data for an application which calculates the costs and benefits of a potential switch to solar energy, by
assessing the solar energy production for a specific building and estimating savings. Open meteorological data is one of the inputs for this analysis.

Arbeidsmarktkansen in the Netherlands, uses public open data on employment and the economy to help organisations and individuals evaluate their actual value on the market and orient their strategies.

The stakes for regions

Opening public data means changing the way information/ data is approached. It requires quality management at the level of data collection: data need to be accurate, comparable, consistent etc (comparing apples with apples, not apples with strawberries…)

Data also needs to be usable and accessible. Publishing data which is difficult to find and to understand or difficult to link with topics which matter for citizens, is likely to result in failure. This is why, in order to harness the potential of open data, organisations need to have the end-user in mind. To define who is the end-user, what their needs could be and ensure a variety of end-users can access and use public open data, it is essential to work hand in hand with civil society, businesses, academics. While this can seem complex, this is also one of the places where the magic of open data can start operating.

Indeed by engaging with stakeholders, by asking for advice on what matters, what is useful, what helps, organisations accept to be challenged. They accept to transform in order to deliver better services. Publishing data in itself is not an objective, what matters with open data is the whole process with and for society.

This is why open data policies and strategies are essential. By developping policies, organisations aim to stimulate and guide the publication of data but also to gain advantages from its use. In the video below Anneke Zuiderwijk from the Delft University of Technology explains the different stages of an open data policy.

Panel debate at AER autumn plenaries

The high level panel debate on Open Data for Startups in Novi sad on 25 Septembre will be an opportunity to hear from renown experts what are the stakes for regions in Europe in 2018:

  • what is the feedback from initiatives across Europe and beyond?
  • how has open data changed the life of citizens?
  • what are the barriers and enablers?
  • how much does it cost?
  • how to ensure the data will be used?
  • how to increase data litteracy and capabilities?
  • how to make data inclusive and sustainable?
  • …

Useful links

Use cases of Open Data on the European Data Portal

CEF Digital Service Infrastructures: Public Open Data
Connecting Europe Facility (CEF) funded sector specific Digital Service Infrastructures (DSIs) deploy complex trans-European digital services based upon mature technical and organisational solutions in diverse areas

Delft University of Technology online course for professionals on Open Data Governance and Use (overview of videos)

Photo by Edu Lauton on Unsplash
Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Follow AER!
Facebooktwitterlinkedinrss

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Digital Transformation, Economy, Employment, Energy, Event 2018 Autumn Committees, Governance, Inclusion, Innovation, Public sector innovation

← Heritage restored: Maramures and its unique projects AER & the Rhine-Alpine Corridor EGTC →

More articles on this topic

Regional representatives gather in Vojvodina, Serbia
Committee 1 Annual Report June 2019 – November 2020
Committee 1 progress Report Spring 2020
Committee 1 Annual Report June 2018 – May 2019
The Committees’ 2019-2020 work programme is out!

AER. Connecting regions, inspiring Europe since 1985.

Follow our newsletter!




View previous campaigns.


  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

2025 AER General Assembly

  • AER Elections 2025

AER Projects

  • Ongoing projects
    • EU-BELONG: An Intercultural Approach to Migrant Integration in Europe’s Regions
    • MEET: Mobilise Europe = Engage Together
    • CL-YE | Climbing the Ladder: Fostering a Culture of Youth Engagement
  • Partner search

Library

Statutory Documents
AER Strategies
Minutes
Media Kit
Activity Reports
Newsletters
European Regions Map

Join AER!

Become a Member

Job Opportunities

Sign up for our Newsletter

Website map

Brussels · Strasbourg · Alba Iulia

A Network, a Partner and a Voice of European regions, since 1985 · Copyright © 2025 · Assembly of European Regions · info@aer.eu · Log in