智慧路燈的全球市場 - 第3版
市場調查報告書
商品編碼
1795408

智慧路燈的全球市場 - 第3版

The Global Smart Street Lighting Market - 3rd Edition

出版日期: | 出版商: Berg Insight | 英文 125 Pages | 商品交期: 最快1-2個工作天內

價格

截至 2024 年底,全球已投入營運的獨立控制智慧路燈數量為 3,290 萬盞。預計到 2029 年將達到 8,500 萬盞,複合年增長率為 20.9%。歐洲是智慧路燈應用的領導國家,目前約佔全球安裝路燈數量的 35%。北美位居第二,緊隨其後的是亞太地區。

本報告研究了全球智慧路燈市場,並透過對 20 家主要公司的訪談、智慧路燈技術概述、45 家主要公司的概況以及供應商市場佔有率和競爭態勢的分析,提供了洞見。

目錄

圖表的清單

摘要整理

第1章 智慧路燈的簡介

  • LED和適路性照明的轉變
  • 智慧路燈
    • 遠端控制和監控
    • 預防性維護與即時故障報告
    • 能耗計量和計費
    • 智慧路燈作為城市平台
  • 智慧路燈基礎設施
    • 可調光燈具和照明控制單元
    • 網路基礎設施
    • 中央管理系統

第2章 企業的簡介與策略

  • 照明控制供應商
    • Acuity Brands
    • BH Technologies
    • C2 SmartLight
    • CITiLIGHT
    • CityLight.net
    • Current Lighting
    • Datek Light Control
    • Dimonoff
    • eSave
    • Flashnet (Lucy Group)
    • Fonda Technology
    • gridComm
    • LACROIX
    • LED Roadway Lighting
    • Lucy Zodion (Lucy Group)
    • M2M Telemetria
    • MEAZON
    • MinebeaMitsumi & Paradox Engineering
    • Revetec
    • Rongwen Energy Technology Group
    • Schreder
    • Sensus (Xylem)
    • Signify
    • Smartmation
    • SSE
    • ST Engineering Telematics Wireless
    • TVILIGHT
    • Ubicquia
    • Umpi
    • Urban Control (DW Windsor)
    • 中國的國內的供應商
  • 軟體和網路平台的專家
    • Cisco
    • Citegestion (EDF)
    • CityLinx
    • Dhyan
    • Itron
    • Luminext
    • TerraGo
    • Trilliant

第3章 市場簡介

  • 歐洲
    • 比利時
    • 捷克
    • 法國
    • 德國
    • 希臘
    • 義大利
    • 荷蘭
    • 北歐各國
    • 波蘭
    • 葡萄牙
    • 羅馬尼亞
    • 西班牙
    • 英國
    • 其他的歐洲
  • 北美
    • 美國
    • 加拿大
  • 中東·非洲
    • 沙烏地阿拉伯王國
    • 阿拉伯聯合大公國
    • 其他的中東
    • 非洲
  • 南美
    • 阿根廷
    • 巴西
    • 墨西哥
    • 其他的南美
  • 亞太地區
    • 中國
    • 澳洲·紐西蘭
    • 印度
    • 其他的亞太地區

第4章 市場預測和趨勢

  • 市場預測
  • 產業的分析
  • 市場趨勢
    • 智慧路燈市場已開始整合
    • 蜂窩技術作為替代連接方式日益普及
    • 軟體創新是競爭力的關鍵
    • 智慧照明供應商押注更廣大的智慧城市市場
    • D4i 和 Zhaga 的採用率正在成長
    • 對互通性的需求正在成長
    • 第二波智慧路燈部署正在加速
    • 智慧燈桿解決方案的商業案例正在減弱
    • 機櫃控制解決方案的需求持續穩定
  • 縮寫和簡稱的清單

This study investigates the latest developments on the smart street lighting market. The global installed base of individually controlled smart street lights amounted to 32.9 million units at the end of 2024. Growing at a CAGR of 20.9 percent, the number will reach 85.0 million in 2029. Europe is the leading adopter and today accounts for around 35 percent of the global installed base. North America is the second largest, closely followed by Asia-Pacific. Get up to date with the latest information about vendors, products and markets.

Highlights from the report:

  • Insights from 20 interviews with market-leading companies.
  • 360-degree overview of smart street lighting technology.
  • Extensive coverage by region with in-depth market profiles of 27 countries.
  • Profiles of 45 key players in the smart street lighting market.
  • Reviews of vendor market shares and competitive dynamics.
  • Market forecasts by region and technology lasting until 2029.
  • Detailed analysis of the latest market and industry developments.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

List of Figures

Executive Summary

1. Introduction to Smart Street Lighting

  • 1.1. The transition to LED and adaptive lighting
  • 1.2. Smart street lighting
    • 1.2.1. Remote control and monitoring
    • 1.2.2. Preventive maintenance and real-time fault reporting
    • 1.2.3. Energy consumption metering and billing
    • 1.2.4. Smart street lighting as a city platform
  • 1.3. Smart street lighting infrastructure
    • 1.3.1. Dimmable luminaires and lighting control units
    • 1.3.2. Network infrastructure
    • 1.3.3. Central management system

2. Company Profiles and Strategies

  • 2.1. Lighting control vendors
    • 2.1.1. Acuity Brands
    • 2.1.2. BH Technologies
    • 2.1.3. C2 SmartLight
    • 2.1.4. CITiLIGHT
    • 2.1.5. CityLight.net
    • 2.1.6. Current Lighting
    • 2.1.7. Datek Light Control
    • 2.1.8. Dimonoff
    • 2.1.9. eSave
    • 2.1.10. Flashnet (Lucy Group)
    • 2.1.11. Fonda Technology
    • 2.1.12. gridComm
    • 2.1.13. LACROIX
    • 2.1.14. LED Roadway Lighting
    • 2.1.15. Lucy Zodion (Lucy Group)
    • 2.1.16. M2M Telemetria
    • 2.1.17. MEAZON
    • 2.1.18. MinebeaMitsumi & Paradox Engineering
    • 2.1.19. Revetec
    • 2.1.20. Rongwen Energy Technology Group
    • 2.1.21. Schreder
    • 2.1.22. Sensus (Xylem)
    • 2.1.23. Signify
    • 2.1.24. Smartmation
    • 2.1.25. SSE
    • 2.1.26. ST Engineering Telematics Wireless
    • 2.1.27. TVILIGHT
    • 2.1.28. Ubicquia
    • 2.1.29. Umpi
    • 2.1.30. Urban Control (DW Windsor)
    • 2.1.31. Domestic Chinese Vendors
  • 2.2. Software and network platform specialists
    • 2.2.1. Cisco
    • 2.2.2. Citegestion (EDF)
    • 2.2.3. CityLinx
    • 2.2.4. Dhyan
    • 2.2.5. Itron
    • 2.2.6. Luminext
    • 2.2.7. TerraGo
    • 2.2.8. Trilliant

3. Market Profiles

  • 3.1. Europe
    • 3.1.1. Belgium
    • 3.1.2. Czech Republic
    • 3.1.3. France
    • 3.1.4. Germany
    • 3.1.5. Greece
    • 3.1.6. Italy
    • 3.1.7. Netherlands
    • 3.1.8. Nordics
    • 3.1.9. Poland
    • 3.1.10. Portugal
    • 3.1.11. Romania
    • 3.1.12. Spain
    • 3.1.13. United Kingdom
    • 3.1.14. Rest of Europe
  • 3.2. North America
    • 3.2.1. United States
    • 3.2.2. Canada
  • 3.3. Middle East & Africa
    • 3.3.1. Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
    • 3.3.2. United Arab Emirates
    • 3.3.3. Rest of Middle East
    • 3.3.4. Africa
  • 3.4. Latin America
    • 3.4.1. Argentina
    • 3.4.2. Brazil
    • 3.4.3. Mexico
    • 3.4.4. Rest of Latin America
  • 3.5. Asia-Pacific
    • 3.5.1. China
    • 3.5.2. Australia & New Zealand
    • 3.5.3. India
    • 3.5.4. Rest of Asia-Pacific

4. Market Forecasts and Trends

  • 4.1. Market forecasts
  • 4.2. Industry analysis
  • 4.3. Market trends
    • 4.3.1. The smart street lighting market has begun its consolidation journey
    • 4.3.2. Cellular technologies trending as a popular connectivity alternative
    • 4.3.3. Software innovation is key for competitiveness
    • 4.3.4. Smart lighting vendors bet on the broader smart cities market
    • 4.3.5. Growing adoption of D4i and Zhaga
    • 4.3.6. Increasing demand for interoperability
    • 4.3.7. Second-wave smart street lighting deployments are picking up pace
    • 4.3.8. Weakening business case for smart pole solutions
    • 4.3.9. Cabinet-control solutions continue to be in steady demand
  • List of Acronyms and Abbreviations

List of Figures

  • Figure 1.1: Dimmable luminaire with external LCU
  • Figure 1.2: Members of the TALQ Consortium
  • Figure 2.1: C-NODE Zhaga IoT
  • Figure 2.2: Dimonoff communications infrastructure
  • Figure 2.3: Flashnet inteliLIGHT Zhaga and NEMA socket LCUs
  • Figure 2.4: Fonda Technology - LCU shipments by region (2024)
  • Figure 2.5: LED Roadway Lighting SLX Micro-Sensing Platform
  • Figure 2.6: Schreder Mesh & Datalift nodes
  • Figure 2.7: SHUFFLE Mobility
  • Figure 2.8: The functionalities of Interact City
  • Figure 2.9: Signify's outdoor multi-sensor
  • Figure 2.10: UNB Control Node
  • Figure 2.11: Ubicquia UbiMetro
  • Figure 2.12: Overview of the CityEdge portfolio
  • Figure 2.13: TerraGo product architecture
  • Figure 4.1: Smart street lighting LCU shipments by region (2024-2029)
  • Figure 4.2: Smart street lighting LCU installed base by region (2024-2029)
  • Figure 4.3: Installed base by communications technology (World 2024-2029)
  • Figure 4.4: Top-10 smart street lighting LCU vendors (World Q4-2024)
  • Figure 4.5: Vendor market shares (World end-2024)
  • Figure 4.6: Supported technology standards by top LCU vendors (Q2-2025)
  • Figure 4.7: Major cabinet-control solution providers (2024)