It was great euphoria for almost 300-
400 Indians (and quite a few meshing
international experts) SDI professionals
when the ”NSDI: Strategy and Action
Plan” was adopted in the impressive 1st
NSDI workshop in Delhi in Feb, 2001.
Fortunately, the great personality of Indian
Space – Dr K Kasturirangan and yet
another great person – Dr V S Ramamurthy
jointly spear-headed this NSDI concept
at that time. Mr Amitabha Pande, yet
another driving force for NSDI, made
all efforts to shape this NSDI concept.
What was NSDI then? As I know of then,
it was the same as NSDI is even today.
NSDI was of “working together of spatial
data agencies”, of the will of “sharing
spatial data”, of “using spatial data for
national good”, of “integrating images and
maps for GIS solutions”, of “an Indian
SDI leadership”, of “best of technology
for NSDI”, of “rigorous and common
standards for spatial data”, of “good spatial
data policies”, of “partnerships and GIS
enterprises” and of “collective good of
all agencies”. Those were the principles
on which Dr Rangan, Dr Ramamurthy, Mr Pande and many others from SOI,
ISRO, NIC, FSI, GSI, NBSSLUP,
NATMO and many other private and
academic institutions founded NSDI.
There was no upmanship, no competition,
no ownership-confl icts, no departmental
differences at that time. NSDI was to
have brought about a seamlessness
in the spatial fabric of India.
Things moved from 2001 onwards –
speedily at the beginning and slowed down
later. We soon moved on to Ooty for the
2nd NSDI Conference. Ooty Conference,
in July, 2002, was a watershed of a sort
for NSDI. Expectations were high and
the “iron was hot” (as they say). Six key
Secretaries of Government of India (GOI)
and about 180 Indian NSDI stakeholders
and a fantastic action plan brought a
forward-looking Ooty communiqué – which
brought the NSDI dream a bit closer to
reality. Then started the trudge ahead –
Agra in November, 2003 where the NSDI
Metadata and Exchange Standards were
unveiled; Lucknow in November, 2004
– where the NSDI thrust was renewed;
Hyderabad in November, 2005 – where
NSDI was called for re-juvenation again
and Goa in July, 2007 – where NSDI was
almost being seen “as gone down history”. |