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19:26, 20 January 2026
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Rosatom Delivers More Than 40 Smart City Projects in a Year

The Russian state nuclear corporation has scaled up AI and IoT solutions across its Smart City ecosystem, rolling out dozens of projects nationwide in 2025.

Photo: GigaChat

Over the course of 2025, Rosatom Infrastructure Solutions, a subsidiary of Rosatom, delivered more than 40 projects based on its Smart City platform, which combines artificial intelligence and Internet of Things (IoTT) technologies, across 17 Russian cities. That figure is roughly one-third higher than the year before, the corporation’s press service told IT-Russia.

Combining Big Data With Neural Network Tools

Using digital technologies, specialists from the division modernized utility supply systems, deployed intelligent video surveillance, introduced IoT-based solutions, and expanded Smart City services. A key priority was integrating large-scale data sets with neural network tools, an approach aimed at cutting operating costs and making municipal processes more manageable.

Artificial intelligence was used to optimize waste collection oversight, classify residents’ requests, generate automated notifications, and quickly locate incidents within video surveillance archives. At the same time, proprietary software known as the Infrastructure IoT Platform helped reduce operating expenses and improve the performance of engineering systems. Maintenance staff, the company said, also became more productive as a result.

Smart Parking Adds to City Budgets

The results of this digital transformation were tangible. Operating and energy costs fell by 9–16 percent, more than 100 emergency situations were prevented, and response times dropped sixfold, to about one hour.

The rollout of smart parking systems delivered additional benefits. These projects eased congestion on urban road networks and brought more order to traffic flows. According to the company, the economic return from creating 1,500 parking spaces allows such projects to pay for themselves in under two years, while adding more than 100 million rubles (around $1.1 million) to municipal budgets.

Rosatom’s Smart City initiative has previously moved beyond the pilot stage and is now being deployed across multiple regions. The company says the platform’s implementation translates into real savings of time and money, improved urban living standards, and broader access to modern digital services for local residents.

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