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  • EO and GIS Standards for Establishing a National Natural Resources Repository - The Indian Experiences in NNRMS

    Paper number

    IAC-05-B1.6.01

    Author

    Dr. Rajeev Jaiswal, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), India

    Coauthor

    Mr. Arup Dasgupta, India

    Coauthor

    Dr. Mukund Rao, Navayuga Spatial Technologies Pvt. Ltd., India

    Coauthor

    Dr. P.S. Roy, National Remote Sensing Agency, India

    Year

    2005

    Abstract
    Information on natural resources is important for a proper management to support the development of any country. For effective planning and development, a variety of data on physical and natural resources, human resources, social practices and economic aspects etc. are required. Natural resources information includes information on land use, land cover, vegetation type, forest density, wetlands, land degradation, urban growth, surface water bodies, drainage, snow-covered areas, soils, terrain characteristics, mineral resources, natural resources “hot-spots” in terms of land use, cropping area, water bodies, minerals, forest etc. many of which are amenable for mapping using Earth Observation (EO) data. Natural resources information along with many other tabular information such as socio-economic, meteorological, infrastructure, environmental etc. can provide valuable inputs for defining policies, decision-making, planning and development. Enabling the services to provide natural resources information is envisaged as an important element of NRR, which is an organised system of the spatial information and other related data. The natural resources services are envisaged to cater the citizen services, governance services, commercial services etc. Hence, the need is to encapsulate the national holdings of natural resources spatial data and EO images in digital format so that the NRR is created.
    
    In India, the NNRMS has the responsibility of establishing, managing and implementing natural resources management, which is coordinated by the Planning Commission and Department of Space acts as the nodal agency. One of the major elements of NNRMS is to establish a National Natural Resources Repository (NRR) – wherein spatial datasets at various scales derived from aerial and satellite images, would be archived in a systematic database. This calls for standardization for the total process of spatial information generation upto its final delivery that enables uniformity and flexibility in mapping and GIS database organisation. 
    
    Many standards already exist but it is valid at the project requirement level and will not serve for the national requirements. These standards needs to be enhanced and updated to incorporate variety of improvements and changes in image resolutions, mapping scales, spatial frameworks, datum and projection parameters, content definition and schematics, GIS designing and quality assessment methods, so that the uniformity in the standards adoption for national projects can be brought in.
    
    NNRMS Standard process has been defined for a ‘common framework’ and has standard parameters for images, thematic mapping, GIS database and services/outputs. Seamlessness (either real or virtual) has been kept as a critical element in the total standardization process allowing both geographical and multi-scale seamlessness definition.
    
    National spatial framework design guidelines have also been defined. According to this, the GIS database of the repository will be in geographic coordinates so that the final delivery can be in a variety of formats or frameworks (even user definable). However, images and thematic maps would comply to nationally-used frameworks.
    
    The standards for various layers and its content have been identified for 6 scales, viz., 1:250000 scale for a quick national perspective, 1:50000 scale for core content of thematic information, 1:10000 scale for urban planning requirements, 1:4000 scale for cadastral and large scale urban information, 1:2000 scale for urban zonal plan and ‘spot areas’ study and any other ‘odd’ scale specific to user-request. The NNRMS Standards is flexible enough to be able to incorporate any spatial data but confirming to a basic set of parameters. The present paper discusses the spatial framework, spatial data accuracy parameters for maps and GIS database, GIS designs parameters, content schema and codification scheme, quality standards, methods for spatial transformation. The paper also discusses how the standards can be implemented through a software/utility that controls the repository activities.
    
    Abstract document

    IAC-05-B1.6.01.pdf

    Manuscript document

    IAC-05-B1.6.01.pdf (🔒 authorized access only).

    To get the manuscript, please contact IAF Secretariat.