Abstract

Abstract. Remote sensing satellites, together with aerial and terrestrial platforms (mobile and fixed), produce nowadays huge amounts of data coming from a wide variety of sensors. These datasets serve as main data sources for the extraction of Geospatial Reference Information (GRI), constituting the “skeleton” of any Spatial Data Infrastructure (SDI). Since very different situations can be found around the world in terms of geographic information production and management, the generation of global GRI datasets seems extremely challenging. Remotely sensed data, due to its wide availability nowadays, is able to provide fundamental sources for any production or management system present in different countries. After several automatic and semiautomatic processes including ancillary data, the extracted geospatial information is ready to become part of the GRI databases. In order to optimize these data flows for the production of high quality geospatial information and to promote its use to address global challenges several initiatives at national, continental and global levels have been put in place, such as European INSPIRE initiative and Copernicus Programme, and global initiatives such as the Group on Earth Observation/Global Earth Observation System of Systems (GEO/GEOSS) and United Nations Global Geospatial Information Management (UN-GGIM). These workflows are established mainly by public organizations, with the adequate institutional arrangements at national, regional or global levels. Other initiatives, such as Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI), on the other hand may contribute to maintain the GRI databases updated. Remotely sensed data hence becomes one of the main pillars underpinning the establishment of a global SDI, as those datasets will be used by public agencies or institutions as well as by volunteers to extract the required spatial information that in turn will feed the GRI databases. This paper intends to provide an example of how institutional arrangements and cooperative production systems can be set up at any territorial level in order to exploit remotely sensed data in the most intensive manner, taking advantage of all its potential.

Highlights

  • Since very different situations can be found around the world in terms of geographic information production and management, the generation of global Geospatial Reference Information (GRI) datasets seems extremely challenging

  • Sensed data becomes one of the main pillars underpinning the establishment of a global Spatial Data Infrastructure (SDI), as those datasets will be used by public agencies or institutions as well as by volunteers to extract the required spatial information that in turn will feed the GRI databases

  • Additional datasets are added to GRI by the public and private sector, generating the commonly known as geographic information (GI). This GI has to be managed using some kind of geographic information management system (GIM)

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Summary

GEOSPATIAL REFERENCE INFORMATION

Geospatial Reference Information (GRI) constitutes the “skeleton” of any Spatial Data Infrastructure (SDI). Among the constituent elements of GRI, there is a subset defined as “core GRI” (cGRI) which, according to the regional body of the United Nations initiative on Global Geospatial Information Management (UN-GGIM) in Europe, is defined as “authoritative data from UN Member States that satisfy minimal needs of crossborder, European and Global level”. This means sustainable and reliable data mastered by countries, upon which thematic data owned by users can be based, and with temporal and historical dimension. This GI has to be managed using some kind of geographic information management system (GIM)

Platforms and sensors for land observation
Cost of acquisition and cost-benefit relationship
Data policy
Ground truth and Volunteered Geographic Information
Massive processing and Big Data
NATIONAL INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS AND THEIR IMPACT ON THE GENERATION OF GRI
National Institutional Arrangements Working Group
The Spanish case
Findings
CONSLUSSIONS
Full Text
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