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Assignment 2 (MSDI)

Marine geospatial data infrastructure is important for several reasons: 1) It provides essential spatial data and tools to support decision making for managing coastal and ocean environments in areas like sustainable development and responding to climate change. 2) An MSDI incorporates important marine data like seabed bathymetry, geology, infrastructure, habitats, and oceanography to support uses like marine planning. 3) Developing a successful MSDI following recognized standards improves data access, sharing, and search capabilities for various stakeholders.

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Adila Ishak
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
73 views

Assignment 2 (MSDI)

Marine geospatial data infrastructure is important for several reasons: 1) It provides essential spatial data and tools to support decision making for managing coastal and ocean environments in areas like sustainable development and responding to climate change. 2) An MSDI incorporates important marine data like seabed bathymetry, geology, infrastructure, habitats, and oceanography to support uses like marine planning. 3) Developing a successful MSDI following recognized standards improves data access, sharing, and search capabilities for various stakeholders.

Uploaded by

Adila Ishak
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CENTRE OF STUDY FOR SURVEYING SCIENCE AND GEOMATICS

FACULTY OF ARCHITECTURE, PLANNING AND SURVEYING

SPATIAL DATA ACQUISITION (SUG 711)

IMPORTANCE OF MARINE GEOSPATIAL DATA INFRASTRUCTURE

PREPARED BY:
SITI NUR ADILA BINTI ISHAK

2013913353

PREPARED FOR:
ASSOC. PROFESSOR DR. HJ. JUAZER RIZAL BIN ABDUL HAMID

Write a brief and concrete essay on the importance of the marine geospatial
data infrastructure.
Introduction
Spatial data has been recognized as an important resource to improve decisionmaking and resource management in both the land and marine environments in
terms of sustainable development. Many countries are developing Spatial Data
Infrastructures (SDIs) to improve access and sharing of spatial data, however
most of these initiatives stop at the coastline. Recently global and regional
activities such as the 3rd United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea
(UNCLOS) and the Sustainable Development Strategy for the Seas of East Asia
(SDS-SEA) have brought to international attention the importance of effective
administration of the marine and coastal environments.
In the field of marine cadaster, maritime boundaries and limits play a crucial role
in delimiting the rights and responsibilities of the sovereign state as well as
those of different levels of government: federal, state/province or municipal, for
example. Maritime boundaries may also outline extents of individual or group
rights i.e., the use, exploitation and management of the maritime space is also
shared by different user communities and stakeholders whose rights must be
considered, weighed, adjudicated and preserved.
A clear representation of a border, legal boundary or limit is difficult without a
map or chart to display it clearly. By providing easy-to-use tools and geographic
visualization of this type of data, modern geospatial software and GIS tools can
enhance the efficiency of maritime boundary delimitation1. Long time geospatial
software2 users have accumulated large archives of maritime boundary and
limits data. This data may reside in data files with different datums, different
projections or different resolutions. These files may also follow the extent of
existing nautical charts and thus have overlapping redundant information that

needs to be kept up-to-date, doubling the work where redundancies occur. The
desktop GIS software approach, despite its efficiency, is confronted with
limitations that make the management of a large number of digital maritime
limits and boundaries a serious challenge.
The technology available to acquire geo-referenced datasets keeps pace with
the evolution of geospatial software. The world is also rapidly going digital with
massive volumes of geospatial data generated each year. These developments
call for a database solution that can handle geographic data while allowing
geographic display. As mentioned above, in the case of maritime limits and
boundaries, the marine sector is not spared in this need for better data
management tools but has some specific requirements due to the 3- or 4dimensional nature of rights in the water column and sub-surface, and the lack
of physical boundary markers over the possible in the ocean and seas. A
modern geospatial technology, known as a hydrographic production database,
addresses some of these special needs and offers increased value for marine
cadaster managers.

Importance of Marine Geospatial Data Infrastructure

According to Dr. Russel Shipman, Hydrography is the branch of applied


sciences which deals with the measurement and description of the physical
features of oceans, seas, coastal areas, lakes and rivers, as well as with the
prediction of their change over time, for the primary purpose of safety of
navigation and in support of all other marine activities, including economic
development, security and defense, scientific research, and environmental
protection. Meanwhile the term SDI (Spatial Data Infrastructure) is often used to
indicate the relevant base collection of technologies, policies and institutional

arrangements that facilitate the availability of and access to spatial data. The
SDI provides a basis for spatial data discovery, evaluation, and application for
users and providers within all levels of government, the commercial sector, the
non-profit sector, academic and by citizens in general.

Geospatial analysis is the gathering, display, and manipulation of imagery, GPS,


satellite photography and historical data, described explicitly in terms of
geographic coordinates or implicitly, in terms of a street address, postal code, or
forest stand identifier as they are applied to geographic models. Geospatial
analysis originated in Canada for cataloging natural resources in the 1960s used
the first geographic information systems (GIS). Geographic information systems
are used to predict, manage and learn about all kinds of phenomena affecting
the earth, its systems and inhabitants. The many applications of geospatial
analysis include crisis management, climate change modeling, weather
monitoring, sales analysis, human population forecasting and animal population
management. Geospatial analyst will filter out relevant from irrelevant data and
apply it to conceptualize and visualize the order hidden within the apparent
disorder of geographically sorted data. Doing so allows them to provide
accurate trend analysis, modeling and predictions. However, analysts must
remain vigilant to try to avoid spatial fallacies, biases or misunderstanding
effects and causal relationships: Geospatial analysis is sometimes considered to
encompass as much intuition as it does science.

Global Warming and Climate Change leading to increased risk of natural


disasters and rising sea levels are important indicators of a changing worldwide
marine and coastal environment. The role hydrographic and oceanographic
spatial data plays in supporting global, regional and national environmental
programmed by providing tools for decision making is absolutely critical. To
understand the forces of change, one needs to be able to provide accurate and

timely base reference information comprising, as a minimum, the topography


and characterization of the seabed upon which temporal information such as
wave, tide and current can be referenced. Whilst the Hydrographic community is
the prime holder of much of this important information, it has yet to identify and /
or appreciate the role it might have in the disseminating this information.
In the broader sense hydrographers, geologists, biologists and oceanographers
can be brought together to provide solutions through enabling frameworks such
as Spatial Data Infrastructures (SDIs). It is important that organizations work
together to ensure best practice is achieved and that spatial data can be made
interoperable to ensure multidisciplinary use.

Geospatial data serve many purposes in the marine planning process, including
visual context, spatial analysis, and cartographic representation. Marine
geospatial data (marine geodata) is essential for marine planning at the local,
regional, or national levels, planning for the future of the ocean and coasts,
science and more. The accessible marine geospatial data are Hydrographic
survey data, traditionally called fair sheets, contain the soundings from the
hydrographic survey, marine primary data consists mainly of seamless depth
data and coastline data in vector format, terrain models of the seabed: 5x5
meter, 25x25 meter and 50x50 meter regular grids of northern Norway (north of
67 degrees) are available.

Marine Spatial Data Infrastructure (MSDI) is the component of a National SDI


that encompasses marine and coastal geographic and business information in
its widest sense. An MSDI would typically include information on seabed
bathymetry

(elevation),

geology,

infrastructure

(e.g.

wrecks,

offshore

installations, pipelines, cables); administrative and legal boundaries, areas of


conservation and marine habitats and oceanography. Some of the features in

MSDI are metadata, interoperability of spatial datasets, network services, data


and service sharing, monitoring, reporting and coordination.
The four main components of a successful coastal and ocean information
network (COIN), as an important component of an SDI are online access to data
using recognized standards, metadata catalogues used to search for geospatial
data, a web interface that allows users to search, access and retrieve
information from the most reliable sources and lastly active participation of data
providers and data users to ensure that the right data are available to contribute
to more effective decision-making.

The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) highlights the
need for better management of the Worlds oceans environmentally and socially,
as well as economically. It also specified marine jurisdictional boundaries, and
their associated rights, for a coastal state. Since UNCLOS III there has been
activity worldwide on marine management focusing on sustainable development,
boundary definition and Integrated Coastal Management (ICM). There has also
been improvement in information and communication technology, which is
globally driving the exchange and sharing of data and information. It is just
recently that these ideas are beginning to come together as countries begin to
think about marine administration and spatial data management. Having access
to this spatial information is regarded as essential or important to the majority of
stakeholders in the marine and coastal environments.

Figure 1: The Development of Marine Administration

Conclusion
Our increased use and improved understanding of the marine and coastal
environments has leads to the realization that we need better management and
administration systems to deal with these areas. SDI is an initiative that allows
access and sharing of spatial data for decision-making, management and
administration. In the terrestrial environment SDI is developing to improve
coordination and sharing of land related datasets. Developing a seamless SDI
that can include data from the land, coast and marine environments will improve
access and sharing of data between these environments. The ability to access
and integrate data has been identified as a problem by people involved in
coastal zone management, as can be seen from the development of ICM
initiatives.

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