Readers may recall the vision and mission outlined by the Dr APJ
Abdul Kalam, the President of India (Coordinates, December 2006).
Alongside we printed an open letter from Dr Muneendra Kumar
addressed to the President where he emphasized the need to
modernize the datum. Some experts respond:
In India, for topographical mapping,
we are using an old Geodetic Datum
(reference ellipsoid on which the
coordinates: Latitude and Longitude
are projected, and mapping is carried
out), called Everest 1880, defined by
the work of Col. George Everest (one
of the greatest Geodesists, for whom
the highest peak in the world is named).
It is a local datum, best-fi tting for India
(as in 1880), but not fi tting the Earth as
a whole in the best possible manner.
Many countries in the world have
been using their own local datums,
and most have already redefi ned
their datum, or have started using the
global datum (fi tting the entire Earth):
WGS84, defi ned by the Defense
Mapping Agency (DMA), USA, which
the GPS uses. Thus, all our Indian
topogrphical maps (topo sheets) still
use Everest1880 ellipsoid, and GPS
gives coordinates on WGS84. If we use
GPS and plot the coordinates observed
on a toposheet, we will be mixing
apples and oranges: the positions
will differ by as much as 300 to 500
metres! Hence, the solutions are:
(i) Use WGS84 as map datum, and
GPS or- (ii) Use the conversion
factors (called transformation
parameters) to convert GPS
coordinates to Everest, and
use with Indian topo sheets.
It is true that we are using on old
datum, but it is being re-defined
under a project launched by Survey
of India (SoI) in the late 80s. I
was in-charge of this project for 6
years (till I joined IIT Bombay).
Similar project completed by USA
for their datum: re-defined as North
American Datum 1983 (NAD83)
from NAD1927, used a very large
manpower and huge funds, and
took over 10 years. In SoI, we had
just 4-5 persons, with a meagre
budget for such project. This is an
important project, and needs urgent
attention of Government of India.
We need Everest2007 soon!!
However, according to the recent map
policy of Government of India, now
being implemented by the SoI, only
the security classifi ed Defence maps
will use the old datum: Everest 1880,
and all open maps, for developmental
projects, general public use etc. will
use WGS84 as datum. Thus, general
public can use GPS with these maps.
That should solve the major problem.
Modernization, developmental projects,
etc. will not be affected. The problem
is in making these new WGS84 maps
available to the public early, which SOI
should take on priority. Till that time,
the problems will remain. Another
problem is that heights/contours on
these new maps are not being made
available easily to public, due to
Defence restrictions. That is a setback,
and needs to be removed: heights/contours are most essential in a map.
If yes, then why can’t
we update it?
As mentioned above, the India
Geodetic Datum is being re-defi ned.
But the project has been relegated
to the back-burner. It should be
given top priority, required funding
and manpower, and completed
immediately. Changing all the
maps to a new datum is a huge task,
requiring huge resources, funds,
manpower, etc. But it is important,
and must be done on priority
Should we use WGS 84 or not?
Most countries in the world are
using WGS84 as the datum for their
mapping. It is a datum which is here
to stay, possibly for a few decades, for
mapping and navigational purposes.
For scientifi c applications like
eathquake research, plate motions
studies etc., scientifi c datums called
International Terrestrial Reference
Frames (ITRF) are defi ned by the
International Earth Rotation Service
(IERS) every year (ITRF2005,
etc.). But for mapping, navigation,
developmental projects, infrastructure
development, and most common
applications, WGS84 is good enough.
The Universal Transverse Mercator
Map Projection and Grid System
(UTM), used most widely all
over the world, is also the most
scientifi c, convenient and digital
mapping-compatible system, and
should be used for these maps.