geospatial & statistics collaboration in ireland...sept. 2016. • discussed our respective un...
TRANSCRIPT
Geospatial & Statistics collaboration in Ireland
Colin Bray, OSi CEO
Introduction
Geospatial & Statistics collaboration in Ireland
Context for collaboration
Our approach to collaboration
What we agreed to collaborate on
What geospatial brings to the relationship
What we’ve achieved to-date
Takeaways
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OSi & the CSO
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• Ireland’s National Mapping Agency
• Established in 1824
• Operates under the Ordnance Survey Ireland Act, 2001
• Mandate: “To provide a national mapping service in the State… creating and maintaining the definitive national mapping and related geographic records”
• Ireland's National Statistical Office
• Established 1949
• Operates under the Statistics Act, 1993
• Mandate: "The collection, compilation, extraction and dissemination for statistical purposes of information relating to economic, social and general activities and conditions in the State"
Context for Collaboration
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Public Sector ICT Strategy
Public Service Reform Plan 2014-2016
Strategic Pillars• Build shared infrastructure• Drive digitisation & innovation• Support data sharing• Improve governance• Increased capabilities
Strategic Reforms
• Focus on Service users
• Focus on efficiencies• Focus on openness
• Leadership & capability
Our approach to Collaboration
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• Started with a coffee between organisation heads in Sept. 2016.
• Discussed our respective UN activities and acknowledged the importance of authoritative national statistics data and geospatial data in NDI.
• Conversation about real collaboration, playing to our organisational strengths, removing duplications of activities where possible.
• Made a commitment in front of senior staff that we would aim to be the best example of collaboration between a statistical organisation and a national mapping agency in Europe within 12 months.
• Formalised our organisational commitment in a 3-page Memorandum Of Understanding (MOU) in Oct. 2016.
• We identified two senior operational leads, delegated & empowered them to develop the relationship and to put in place a programme of work that would deliver on our MOU commitments.
What we agreed to Collaborate on
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OSi/CSO MOU, October 2016
Aim: To establish a closer working relationship to maximise CSO and OSi data and assets for our mutual stakeholders and in support of the Government’s Public Sector Reform agenda.
1. Establish joint CSO/OSi technical working group to develop data visualisation.
2. Develop technical solution to fulfil Ireland’s reporting responsibilities under the United Nations 2030 agenda for Sustainable Development.
3. Collaboration in developing new data dissemination channels.
4. Promote the statistical potential of geospatial data as part of the wider development of the National Data Infrastructure.
What Geospatial/OSi brings to the relationship (1)
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ReferencingAuthoritative Referencing of geography
(National Object Platform)
VisualisationMaintained and consistent Multi-
Resolution Data Store
Publishing & AccessNational Geospatial Platform
(GeoHive collaborative portal)
What Geospatial/OSi brings to the relationship (2)
7National Data Infrastructure
What we’ve achieved to-date (1)
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Developed Geospatial portal for Census 2016
• Statistical and boundary data fused together to provide over 500 layers of geo-statistical information.
http://census2016.geohive.ie/
What we’ve achieved to-date (2)
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Developed and launched Ireland’s UN SDGs Data Hub
http://irelandsdg.geohive.ie/
• Established a joint OSi/CSO data governance team.
• We’ve been working on 12 of the 17 SDG Goals and have developed 56 indicators and 101 datasets at NUTS 3, county and local area geography.
What we’ve achieved to-date (2)
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What we’ve achieved to-date (2)
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What we’ve achieved to-date (2)
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What we’ve achieved to-date (3)
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Developed a National Geospatial Linked Data Standard
• 20+ common national datasets as ‘5 Star’ Linked Data• Publication of 2016 Census data
What we’ve achieved to-date (4)
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Jointly hosting of EFGS 2017
• 230 delegates
• 31 countries
• 5 continents
Takeaways
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• Collaboration proven to be a great success, providing clear win-win for us and our stakeholders (we are greater than the sum of our parts).
• The value of having a clear understanding on organisational roles and responsibilities regarding national geospatial and statistical data (playing to our strengths & removing duplication).
• It’s amazing what can be done with a simple MOU and good will.
• The value in visualising statistical data within a geospatial context.
• The value of re-purposing existing systems and architecture.
• As a result of this successful collaboration CSO and OSi are partnering in taking the leading role in supporting government in the development of a National Data Infrastructure (NDI).
• Collaboration starts at the top – have that cup of coffee and make a commitment to do something . Build from there, it’ that easy.
UNECE High-Level Seminar on Strategic Partnerships in Official StatisticsGeneva, 12th April 2018
Thank You