How Mobile Apps Are Becoming Smart City Infrastructure
Smart city conversations usually start with hardware: IoT sensors, smart grids, EV charging stations, water meters.
Cities and federal agencies are pouring real money into this layer. The U.S. Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act alone allocates $7.5 billion for EV charging infrastructure, with billions more for grid modernization and clean energy upgrades.
But hardware is only half the story. The other half is the citizen-facing software that decides whether residents actually use any of it.
Mobile apps are becoming as load-bearing for a smart city as the sensors and substations beneath it.
The layer most cities still under-invest in
The IMD Smart City Index 2026 ranked 146 cities worldwide on how well technology connects to daily urban life. Zurich, Oslo, and Geneva took the top three spots.
The differentiator wasn’t sensor density or fiber speed. It was access. Their residents interact with sustainability through digital tools every single day. They have established systems in “institutions, infrastructure, and structure-related indicators.”
Source: IMD Smart City Index 2026 report
Oslo, for instance, draws electricity from Norway’s grid, which runs on roughly 98% renewable energy, mostly hydropower. But the part that earns Oslo its rank isn’t generation. It’s the digital interface residents use to live inside that clean grid.
The International Telecommunication Union defines a smart, sustainable city as one that uses ICTs to improve the quality of life, raise efficiency, and shrink its environmental footprint, while staying inclusive. Inclusion is the word that matters.
Cities can build the cleanest grid on earth, but if residents can’t see it, shape it, or act on it from their phones, the system stops short of the people it’s supposed to serve.
Energy: when residents can see consumption, behavior changes
Global energy demand rose 2.2% in 2024, per the International Energy Agency, well above the 1.3% annual average from the prior decade.
Most of that came from electricity, driven by record temperatures and the electrification of homes and transport.
Mobile-connected energy monitoring puts that abstract number on a household phone screen.
The policy implication for cities: utility-linked apps with consumption alerts, off-peak nudges, and integration with solar and battery systems do the household-level work that no city ordinance can do alone.
Demand-response programs only work when residents have a reason and a tool to respond. The app is that tool.
EV charging: where private operators are filling the public-funding gap
Per Paren’s 2025 State of the U.S. Fast-Charging Industry report, DC fast-charging ports in the U.S. grew about 30% in 2025, with more than 18,000 new ports going live and 141 million public fast-charging sessions logged.
The harder truth underneath that headline: public funding underdelivered. The $7.5 billion NEVI program had built fewer than 400 ports by mid-2025, according to Reuters reporting on a GAO review. The build-out happened anyway because private operators outpaced expectations.
That shifts where the app layer matters. When deployment is privately led, driver confidence depends entirely on the software each operator ships. EV charging apps now handle real-time availability, route planning, payment, and grid sync, letting drivers schedule charging during off-peak hours or when renewable supply is highest.
EV adoption targets in city climate plans assume residents will trust the network. They won’t, unless the app layer works.
Waste: Seoul’s policy lesson
Seoul pairs RFID-enabled food waste bins with a volume-based fee system. Residents swipe a card at the bin, the bin weighs their waste, and disposal fees are billed monthly.
South Korea’s broader pay-as-you-throw program reduced household waste sent to landfill by roughly 90% over its first two decades. That’s one of the strongest documented policy outcomes in modern waste management.
Source: Development Asia
Seoul is now layering a points-based incentive program on top. Households that cut their RFID-tracked food waste earn credits redeemable through the city’s Eco Mileage system for taxes, gas bills, apartment management fees, or Seoul Love and Onnuri gift certificates.
The repeatable part isn’t the sensor. It’s the policy decision to build a citizen-facing interface (the bin swipe, the app credit, the visible reduction rate) alongside the city’s operational dashboard.
That’s the part that other cities adopting sustainable waste management sometimes leave out, then wonder why participation lags.
Carbon: making personal emissions visible
Climate at the city level still feels abstract until something turns it into a daily number. That’s the niche carbon-tracking apps fill, and it’s why some businesses are embedding climate action directly into transactions residents already make.
Greenslips 4 Earth, an NSW-based CTP insurance comparison service, plants a tree for every greenslip sold through their environmental insurer partner, working with One Tree Planted on a $1-for-1-tree basis.
It’s a small example of a bigger civic idea: sustainability scales fastest when it sits inside the bureaucratic moments residents already have to navigate, like registering a car.
This is also where my professional lens kicks in. At Appetiser Apps, one of the projects closest to this discussion is Good Empire, a social challenge app built around the UN’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals.
Users join real-world challenges, like a zero-petrol week or a meat-to-plant meal swap, and the app tracks both their individual impact and the collective ripple of everyone they inspire.
Citizen engagement: the democratic layer
Seoul has run a citywide Participatory Budgeting program since 2012, scaled to roughly KRW 70 billion by 2017 (between USD 50 million and 60 million annually) to fund citizen-proposed projects through apps and online tools.
Residents propose, discuss, and vote on smart city initiatives directly from their phones.
This is the layer that turns smart cities from top-down engineering into something collaborative. When residents can shape municipal spending from a phone, the dynamic shifts.
Technology stops being something done to a city and becomes something done with its people. For policymakers, that’s not a nice-to-have. That’s the difference between a smart city plan that survives the next election cycle and one that doesn’t.
What this means for cities and the teams building for them
I work on the development side because that’s where the citizen-facing layer actually gets built.
At Appetiser Apps, we’ve worked with founders across climate tech, mobility, and social impact, and the same pattern repeats: the apps that get traction aren’t the ones with the prettiest UI. They’re the ones that make a sustainable choice the obvious one inside an action a resident was already taking.
For cities, the policy implication is direct. If your climate or smart city plan doesn’t have a citizen-facing software strategy alongside the hardware procurement, the plan is incomplete.
Sensors without an interface are an expense. With the right app layer on top, they become a participation infrastructure.
Climate action at the city level works when millions of residents make slightly different choices every day. The question for city leaders isn’t whether the hardware is ready. It’s whether the software makes the right choice, the easy one for the people you serve.
Your next action? Audit your city’s published climate or smart city plan for a named citizen-facing software strategy.
If it isn’t there, that’s the gap to close first.
About the Author
Maria Krisette Lim is an SEO & Content Marketing Consultant with over 15 years of experience producing print ads and web content. Krisette has a BSBA degree, major in Business Management and Entrepreneurship. When she’s not tinkering with words and punctuation, she’s either curled up with a book while sipping hot tea, playing with her toddler, tinkering with website builders, or teaching other SEOs and writers through workshops and implementation sessions.