---
abstract: |
  The new guidelines are in stark contrast to the draconian Draft
  Geospatial Information Regulation Bill, 2016, which effectively banned
  the acquisition of geospatial data without a government licence.
archive-url: "https://web.archive.org/web/20230829053902/https://www.news18.com/news/opinion/two-experts-decode-new-mapping-policy-guidelines-explain-why-this-is-a-giant-leap-forward-for-india-3454637.html"
author:
- Pranesh Prakash
- Sajjad Anwar
authors:
- name: Pranesh Prakash
- name: Sajjad Anwar
categories:
- Open data
citation:
  abstract: The new guidelines are in stark contrast to the draconian
    Draft Geospatial Information Regulation Bill, 2016, which
    effectively banned the acquisition of geospatial data without a
    government licence.
  accessed: 2021-11-20
  archive: "https://web.archive.org/web/20230829053902/https://www.news18.com/news/opinion/two-experts-decode-new-mapping-policy-guidelines-explain-why-this-is-a-giant-leap-forward-for-india-3454637.html"
  author:
  - Pranesh Prakash
  - Sajjad Anwar
  available-date:
    date-parts:
    - - 2021
      - 2
      - 20
    iso-8601: 2021-02-20
    literal: 2021-02-20
    raw: 2021-02-20
  citation-key: prakashTwoExperts2021
  container-title: News18
  issued:
    date-parts:
    - - 2021
      - 2
      - 20
    iso-8601: 2021-02-20
    literal: 2021-02-20
    raw: 2021-02-20
  language: en
  title: Two experts decode new mapping policy guidelines, explain why
    this is a giant leap forward for India
  type: article-newspaper
  URL: "https://www.news18.com/news/opinion/two-experts-decode-new-mapping-policy-guidelines-explain-why-this-is-a-giant-leap-forward-for-india-3454637.html"
comments:
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    theme: clean
date: 2021-02-20
engines:
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keywords:
- geodata
- geography
- maps
- open data
- free/libre/open source software
license:
  text: CC BY-NC 4.0
  type: creative-commons
  url: "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/"
listing-page: ../press.html
original-url: "https://www.news18.com/news/opinion/two-experts-decode-new-mapping-policy-guidelines-explain-why-this-is-a-giant-leap-forward-for-india-3454637.html"
publication: News18
title: Two experts decode new mapping policy guidelines, explain why
  this is a giant leap forward for India
title-block-categories: true
toc-title: Table of contents
---

# Two experts decode new mapping policy guidelines, explain why this is a giant leap forward for India

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Earlier this week, the Department of Science and Technology (DST) issued
a [new set of
guidelines](https://www.news18.com/news/tech/govt-announces-liberalisation-of-map-making-policies-allowing-free-access-to-geospatial-data-3437564.html){rel="noopener noreferrer"}
under the National Map Policy 2005. For the first time, the government
has made it clear that ordinary citizens can create, collect, publish,
and keep maps (both physical and digital) without asking the government
for permission or getting security approvals. This is a welcome step
that should have been taken decades ago.

It stands in stark contrast to the draconian Draft Geospatial
Information Regulation Bill, 2016, which effectively banned the
acquisition of geospatial data (i.e., mapping information) without a
government licence. Had it passed, it would effectively have rendered
all unlicensed maps (or even collecting of underlying data for a map)
illegal, and in its plain reading would have penalized students drawing
inaccurate maps during their geography lesson. Thankfully, that proposed
Bill never materialized into an Act.

The contrast between the guidelines and the Bill shows how the central
government is not a monolith: different bureaucrats and ministers take
drastically different approaches to the same issue.

## A boost to open-source mapping

The new guidelines emphasize mapping data as an asset to be used for
India's benefit. With the new guidelines, high resolution mapping by
private citizens, which in some cases was already being undertaken in a
gray zone of legal uncertainty, will become clearly legal. "Street view"
maps, which show photographs superimposed onto maps to create a virtual
reality experience, are also legalized. Importantly, all existing
geospatial data produced by any central government entity using public
funds is required to be publicly shared---free of charge with other
government departments, and at a "fair and transparent" fee for others.

Given how guarded departments have been of their data, this is quite
revolutionary. However, as with the National Data Sharing and
Accessibility Policy, the National Open Standards Policy, and the RTI
Act, revolutionary policies and laws are only as revolutionary as their
implementation would allow them to be. There is some room for
improvement: non-commercial use of the data should be exempted from
fees. Citizens should not be made to pay for non-commercial usage of
data that they've themselves funded with their taxes.

These guidelines are welcome news to India's burgeoning community of
open-source mapping. The largest such volunteer-driven mapping effort,
OpenStreetMap (OSM), powers everything from the maps used by taxi
aggregators to those used by the United Nations for disaster relief
missions. India has unique addressing and navigation challenges that can
only be solved through localized research and standardization.

In a city like Bengaluru, streets can be one-way one day and one-way in
the reverse direction the next, and often directions are used instead of
addresses. Such bureaucratic caprice and mapping realities can only be
reflected in a digital map with some amount of accuracy by decentralized
volunteer-driven projects, which have the potential to be both faster
and more detailed. Further, if you go to remote parts of India, such as
the hinterlands of Himachal Pradesh, you will find that commercial maps
such as Google Maps do not provide nearly the same amount of detail as
volunteer-driven OSM, to which anyone can contribute.

## Need collaboration, not protectionism

While the new guidelines bring much-necessary liberalization, they come
along with some protectionist measures as well. They prevent non-Indian
entities from enjoying the new licence-free regime. They also require
that maps with spatial accuracy greater than 1 metre horizontally or 3
metres vertically be created by an Indian entity and stored on Indian
servers. This could potentially jeopardize open mapping---while it is
predominantly Indians who contribute to efforts like OSM, there's no
restriction placed in such a volunteer-driven effort. Further, OSM
servers are located all over the globe, and it is unclear why an
India-located server is better. Lastly, it is also unclear whether these
regulations are in line with India's obligations under the WTO's GATS
(General Agreement on Trade in Services) framework. A better way to
promote Atmanirbhar Bharat in this sector would be to stop depending on
foreign companies by requiring government entities to use only maps
generated by Indian entities, which are openly licenced, and put no
burden on the exchequer.

We have seen the government collaborate with mapping communities in the
past. For instance, Mapathon Keralam was launched in 2019 by the Kerala
State IT Mission and volunteers to map critical assets in the state for
emergency and rescue operations, and was found to be very useful by the
Kerala government. We need more such collaborations to improve
everything, from disaster management to bus schedules and routing. To
enable this, administration at all levels---central, state, municipal,
and taluk---need to work with civic hackers, and ways and means must be
found to encourage public-spirited technologists as well as the
commercial mapping industry.

As the guidelines recognize, the government also needs to bring other
policies, such as those covering remote-sensing and the national spatial
data infrastructure, in line with the new guidelines, and streamline the
flow of data within the government. Importantly, stakeholders should be
publicly consulted before the formulation of further guidelines and
policies, since they can advise the government on how to unlock the full
potential of mapping through the usage of open standards and APIs (for
technical interoperability), open licences (for legal interoperability),
and open metadata and vocabularies (for semantic interoperability),
along with insights into civic and developmental issues to tackle with
technology.

The DST has shown great sagacity through this commitment to removing the
yoke of superfluous regulations that has held India back: now we must
move forward to translate this into results on the ground.

*Pranesh Prakash is a technology policy researcher, and an Affiliated
Fellow at Yale Law School's Information Society Project. Sajjad Anwar is
a cartographer, and works on geospatial data and strategy at Development
Seed. Views are personal.*
