Abstract

The current and planned EU regulations concerning INSPIRE have forced the Member States to develop national geoportals. The aim of creating geospatial data infrastructure was to unify the exchange of data at a national level, and consequently to create the INSPIRE geoportal by the Community Research Centre of the European Commission (JRC), which is to be the center of the European network of geospatial data infrastructure. New opportunities and new solutions to the problems have emerged through the use of thematic layers. The rights to the land each have potential restrictions on its use, and these rights can sometimes prevent the land from being used for its intended purpose. The purpose of the article is to demonstrate the possibility of developing maps showing the utility networks and the right to the land acquired by the utility company. The authors carried out a SWOT analysis of the systemic use of cartographic documents as a way of disclosing the rights to real estate in order to set up utility networks in Poland. The authors examined the impact of this solution on future property owners (investors) to provide them with full knowledge about a given area of real estate. Remote sensing methods may be useful for the disclosure of rights on maps of technical infrastructure, because currently there is no such information in the systems. The developed solution should be used by both local and national geoportals.

Highlights

  • In 2016, the United Nations (UN) adopted 17 Sustainable Development Goals

  • Two of these goals are: Zero Hunger, and Clean Water and Sanitation. Implementing these goals requires land, along with information about what the land can be used for. Such data are essential for sustainable farming, which will lead to increased food production and the prevention of hunger [1]

  • The authors characterized the concept of real estate and pointed out the problems that arise when treating real estate as a three-dimensional space in which utility networks are located

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Summary

Introduction

In 2016, the United Nations (UN) adopted 17 Sustainable Development Goals. Sustainable development is a way of meeting the needs of the present without compromising future generations. Sustainable development can be obtained by harmonizing the following elements: economic growth, social inclusion, and environmental protection. Two of these goals are: Zero Hunger, and Clean Water and Sanitation. Implementing these goals requires land, along with information about what the land can be used for Such data are essential for sustainable farming, which will lead to increased food production and the prevention of hunger [1]. Providing these goals is possible through the implementation of the specific targets indicated by the UN. One specific target is to ensure a sustainable food production system, which will be possible by selecting areas where no line investments such as pipelines or cables are planned to be carried out and so cultivation will not be threatened by the construction of utility transmission equipment

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