SAP has been conducting research into public security for some years now, using existing software solutions as a basis. The Future Public Security Center will start by focusing on the SoKNOS project, a security research program of the German federal government set up in 2007, which investigates service-oriented architectures supporting networks of public security. The project is led by SAP and involves partners from industry and research, as well as stakeholders from the fire and police departments. By 2009, the project will come up with an IT-based platform to improve cooperation and cross-organizational collaboration between police, fire, and emergency departments, government agencies, and other organizations in the event of a crisis.
“In an emergency, you need to get an overview of the situation very quickly,” Kagermann said. “All the available data must be brought together and the relevant experts connected – and that’s only possible with state-of-the-art information technology.” As the global leader in enterprise application software, he added, SAP can contribute decades of experience in standardizing processes, as well as being the number one innovator in service-oriented software architecture that enables different IT infrastructures to be connected. He added that, with the expertise from ongoing customer projects, SAP is a natural partner for continuing to improve public security though IT.
But this connectivity is still a great challenge for emergency services coping with disasters, as was shown when the first results from the SoKNOS project were presented by project lead Thomas Ziegert from SAP Research together with Sabina Kaczmarek, head of research projects at the Berlin fire department, and Benno Fritzen, chief fire officer at the Münster fire department.
They simulated the activities in the control room using the flooding of the German city of Cologne as an example, demonstrating how a modern IT infrastructure can help people decide on the best action to take – fast and with sound information. Whereas fire departments today still use magnetic boards, SAP’s living lab boasts a huge touch screen, which clearly provides all the latest information about the event.