Geospatial Strategy launch - revisiting some of the questions raised
So, 4 weeks on from the launch of the geospatial strategy, and
having written a light-touch reflection on the event and the strategy I thought
I’d now surface some of the questions and more broadly policy ambitions asked
by the (virtual) audience on the Remo virtual platform (that will become more familiar I am sure) that day. A public service if you like.
(c) Remo
I’ve taken a
somewhat liberal rather than literal view of the questions, hacking them into sub-themes
or subject areas. Of course, there are
others but these are some of those that continue the conversation.
Geospatial data, in particular open geospatial data, opening
up data and maintaining that data was a prominent area of interest and concern. With the new PSGA and the launch of the OS DataHub on 1st
July the public sector has never had better access to OS data or greater
opportunity to derive new insights. At
the same time are cash-strapped local authorities able to commit
or divert resources to improving and/or maintaining their obligations to the open
data agenda amongst all their other keener priorities? The audience voiced concern about the sustainability
of much of this open data and with it the confidence to build products and services
and deliver value using those data sets without specific mandate, backed up by
regulation or legislation and with oversight, governance, support, funding and
enforcement. Clarity over the direction of travel seems to be the request.
A strategy will always be measured by its impacts and
context – licence changes for OS data for example do not happen in isolation - and
with many attendees interested in commercial opportunities it is already
evident that new products are feeding through into the commercial marketplace. In that context there was audience interest in having greater
visibility of VOA, UKHO and the Coal Authority (OS, BGS via the NUAR programme,
and HMLR have been prominent to date).
Unlocking underground asset data via the NUAR pilots has been attracting a lot of interest. The audience was
quick to wonder where this leads, in relation to GC’s role and to
other distributed data gathering activities.
For example, who is going to “own” underground asset data, licence it,
have access to it, through what means, at what cost, with what limitations and
what does this mean for existing aggregators and service providers. Or, is there intent by extension, for GC to become an arbiter or even conduit to market for geospatial data however and wherever gathered in in all
dimensions – in the air, underwater, from all manner of site surveys, whether
for large scale BIM or your local bats.
It seems unlikely today and the vision doesn’t point in that direction
but the proposal to contract for a single centralised hub under the auspices of
GC certainly animated an audience from the wider digital economy. It is certainly an area where industry will seek clarity and that will be watched closely.
Questions relating to geospatial capability formed a second strand amongst attendees. This was mainly in relation to skills
and training on the one hand and to the relative paucity of overt recognition
given in the strategy to existing UK plc (as opposed to public sector) capacity
and leadership in geospatial, earth observation and location data ethics on the
other.
The audience expressed interest in how GC is or is proposing
to work with DfES and others to embed location data and skills in the digital
literacy agenda i.e. beyond “just” geography, in statistics, sciences,
economics, computer science, and throughout primary, secondary, tertiary education
and lifelong learning. I know this is a
focal area for RGS, AGI, Nesta as well so I think what is being sought is some
definition of what progress in this dimension looks like.
Which, interestingly, holds up a mirror to the success of UK
plc in the wider geospatial domain, not least the many existing platforms feeding
the location data economy and the facilities and capabilities of the space cluster
at Harwell including the Satellite Applications Catapult. There was audience interest in effect, using editors
rights, in the absence of acknowledgement of what the UK commercial geospatial
sphere is already doing and capable of while at the same time the strategy riffs on UK’s global geospatial leadership. My sense is that the audience felt there
remains a disconnect and that the challenge remains for GC to better embrace the
wider UK geospatial ecosystem than it has to date.
Given the potentially time limited nature of any government
created commission there was attendee interest in what might broadly be
described as what does geospatial success look like and how can the wider
ecosystem be part of it, to ensure continuity and sustainability in the long term. There was interest
in GC sharing their stakeholder mapping and consultees to date to give others a
chance to have their interests represented and map out the widest landscape.
There was a question also about how GC assesses market failure and appropriate
interventions – some perhaps looking again at where NUAR might lead in other sectors such as CAV.?
There was a warm reception for the widening of scope to 9 sectors accompanied
by interest as to how GC saw this being delivered, with what engagement model with industry, against what criteria and
over what timeframes.
The devolved administrations went relatively unrecognised at
a time when local data gathering, analysis and actionable insight in respect of
health, waste and netzero amongst other issues are dominating local, national
and global agendas. So, perhaps not surprising that there were questions
requiring GC to address and/or provide greater clarity and granularity as to the
intent and implications of the geospatial strategy in the devolved
administrations. In this context there was also interest in the role GC,
sitting as it does in Cabinet Office, can or will play in the wider debate
around distributed release of ‘local’ data (sub)sets to support local decision
making.
Much has been made of the £5.5-11bn in savings to
come from adoption of the geospatial strategy and pursuit of the 21 unlocks. The strategy acknowledges that much of this
is to come from savings in the public sector so the final big question is how does the Geospatial
Commission aim to stimulate improved collaboration, silo reduction, greater
sharing to achieve this and what is the role for the commercial sector in
supporting that endeavour?
Doubtless others might couch the questions asked differently and for sure there are questions that went unasked - those are for another time!
Revisiting some of the launch questions aims to keep them in our collective consciousness. Our hope must be that the national geospatial
strategy becomes a living evolving thing, feeding into and responding to emerging
thinking for example in the forthcoming space and infrastructure strategies, in the national risk registers and preparedness efforts and in ongoing dialogue. After all, location data and spatial
thinking are established components in achieving the critical insights that allow business
and government to collaborate on the response to, plan effectively for and invest in a re-shaped
world of work and mobility.
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Thank you for taking the time to ponder my musings and for any contribution you make. Although comments appear immediately (i.e. unmoderated) I will remove (or if possible) edit offensive comments.