Encapsulating the maps and images into National
Spatial Data Infrastructure (NSDI) is the need
of the hour and the emphasis has to be on information
transparency and sharing, with the recognition
that the spatial information is a national resource
and citizens, society, private enterprise and
government have a right to access it, appropriately.
Only through common conventions and technical
agreements, standards, metadata de?nitions, network
and access protocols will it be easily possible
for the NSDI to come into existence,” Dr.
K. Kasturirangan, Chairman, Indian Space Research
Organisation (ISRO) writes in the foreword of
Discussion Document on National Spatial Data Infrastructure
(NSDI): Strategy and Action Plan. During the valedictory
session, two sub groups were constituted. One
Standard subgroup that was to recommend data standards,
metadata standards, exchange standards and the
formats while the other Network subgroup was supposed
to focus on technological issues connected with
networking and accessibility. The need was also
felt to evaluate the needs of Human Resource Development.
The workshop can be considered as a landmark development
on two counts: one, it was a ?rst public poser
of Government of India on NGDI and second, is
the release of a discussion document NSDI: Strategy
and Action Plan. The discussion document was well
received and appreciated during the workshop and
held long term prospects in making NGDI a reality.
The document is very comprehensive as it discusses
not only the need, content, design elements of
NSDI but elaborates upon its organisational framework,
funding mechanism and implementation.
The ?rst NGDI workshop enthused the geomatics
community in India with an anticipation of new
era. Also there were interesting debates on the
name itself whether ‘spatial’ or ‘geospatial’.
Later on it was the spatial lobby that got its
way. And one can notice the change in name from
NGDI to NSDI onwards.
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