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Australia and New Zealand
Spatial Marketplace
Demonstrator Project
Cathy Crooks
ANZSM Project Manager
Victorian Department of Sustainability and Environment
Vision
the Spatial Marketplace will be a simple and useable
one-stop-shop for finding spatial data, accessing
spatial analysis tools and sharing spatial resources.
�complete publishing, discovery, access, distribution and
interoperability services for all spatial information
resources in Australia and New Zealand
2
ANZSM Partners
New Zealand
& Program 3
Project Control
Board
Steering Committee
Technical
Reference
Group
ANZSM Evaluation
�Series of roadshows and workshop during 2012
across Australian and New Zealand
Evaluation and feedback
Evaluation Purpose
�Engage a broader range of stakeholders
and users
�Receive feedback, thoughts and ideas
�Evaluating options for the Spatial
Marketplace
�Determining next steps
Key Questions
�Do you support the Australia and New
Zealand Spatial Marketplace concept?
�Would you actively support a Australia and
New Zealand Spatial Marketplace?
�What functions would you like to see in an
operational Australia and New Zealand
Spatial Marketplace?
Where did we go?
Who did we speak to?
Government Private Academia
Brisbane 9 4 0
Melbourne 6 10 1
Wellington 10 6 2
Sydney 7 9 2
Canberra 11 3 0
Adelaide 8 6 0
Perth 3 5 4
Hobart 10 2 0
Top 5 benefits1 2 3 4 5
Brisbane Discoverability Improved
access
Provision of
resources
Transparency
of source
Access to fit
for purpose
Melbourne Discoverability National not
state
Simplified
licensing
Improved
access
Access to fit
for purpose
Wellington Simplified
licensing
Facilitates
linkages
Control of
resources
Commercial
issues resolved
Increase
productivity
Sydney Single point of
access
Simplified
licensing
Choice of
resources
Facilitate
innovation
Promotional
for industry
Canberra Discoverability Authoritative
resources
Single point of
access
Reduce costs /
cost effective
Understand
resource value
Adelaide Discoverability Improved
access
Saves time and
money
Single point of
access
Innovation/
value adding
Perth Reliability Automated
serendipity
All data can be
found
Data currency Multiple access
channels
Hobart Efficiency Networking
crowdsourcing
Awareness of
what is there
One stop shop Reduce some
barriers to access
Barriers to participation
�Politics and government policy
�Resourcing
�Broad scale commitment
�Truly representative model
�Pricing and licensing, IP
�Sustainable business model
�Work with existing systems
�Unknown cost of participation
�Existing commercial agreements
�Unknown return on investment
�Resolving the ‘hard issues’
�Standards implementation
�Understanding legal liability
� IT infrastructure
�Quality of current data
�Confidence levels by users
�Custodian comfort
�Resistance to change
Question 1
�Do you support the Australia and New
Zealand Spatial Marketplace concept?
�Majority
• Yes – definitely
• Yes – maybe
�The rest = No
Question 2
�Would you actively support a Australia and
New Zealand Spatial Marketplace?
�Half = Conditional maybe
• Depends on business case
• Depends on commitment
�Half = No
Question 3
�What functions would you like to see in an
operational Australia and New Zealand
Spatial Marketplace?
Functionality required
�Discovery that works
�Mixed models for payment
�Reminders to update
metadata/ good metadata
�Custodian contact details
�Feedback for resources
�Web services integration
�User friendly
�SaaS
�Visualise before download
�Tools for linking data
�Data and product access
�Secure transactions
�Access to skills/ knowledge
�Advertising functions
�Accessing most recent resources
�Automation of mechanical
functions
Current state
�Agreed that there is a difference between
a SDI and the Spatial Marketplace
�Can be created by adapting existing
infrastructure, but …
�It is an evolving and maturing concept
requiring further research and innovation
Recommendations
�Leverage existing infrastructures – adopt, adapt,
invent
�Focus on standards
�Research industry standard search architectures
�Garner support from the private sector
�Make the most of lessons learned
�Maintain the vision
�Openly share the demonstrator IP and code
Recommendation 1.1
� The current Australian Spatial Data Directory (ASDD) Project being
undertaken by the Office of Spatial Policy (OSP) and Geoscience
Australia (GA) seek to leverage the opportunities for research and
collaboration with the research community, including CSIRO, NCRIS,
and CRC-SI to test and develop, a robust national search and
discovery capability with a focus on moving to a semantic web
environment in the future.
� Where possible CRC-SI leverage the research ontologies /vocabularies
/semantics / and linked data of those entities and other jurisdictions
that have already made significant progress in this area; and
� Consult with OSP, GA and CSIRO to understand the SIS Stack (SISS)
architecture and potential national capabilities.
Recommendation 1.2
�To increase existing levels of interoperability across the
system of systems ANZLIC leverage both completed and
current work on standardised reference architectures,
middleware and crosswalks, including:
�CRC-SI Project 3.06 Alignment Study of Spatial Data Supply
Chains; and
�existing SDIs including, but not limited to, ASDD, AuScope, SISS,
National Environmental Information Infrastructure (NEII), LINZ
Data Service, SLIP Future, AURIN and PSMA systems.
Recommendation 2.1
�ANZLIC, via TC-211 Working Group and
ANZ OGC Forum, tap into the existing
standards work in the ISO, OGC and
INSPIRE (and the Canadian equivalent)
organisations.
Recommendation 2.2
�CRC-SI use its relationship with OGC to
input and leverage the work of the OGC
Phase 9 (OWS-9).
Recommendation 2.3
�ANZLIC Secretariat engage with the Open
Technology Foundation and similar
organisations to explore opportunities to
work through standards issues and
compliance of existing infrastructures.
Recommendation 2.4
�As part of the development of the NFSDF ANZLIC
to provide oversight to the development of a
standards based spatial information architecture,
in consultation with the jurisdictions, to facilitate
search/discovery/access via the web for existing
infrastructure. This effort will draw upon the
current effort in developing a reference spatial
architecture in OSP, Landgate, the NZ Geospatial
Office, CSIRO and BOM.
Recommendation 2.5
�Seek commitment from ANZLIC members
to implement the agreed standard
architecture to ensure interoperability and
maximise the search, discovery, and access
opportunities from a national perspective.
Recommendation 3.1
�The CRC-SI undertake research, and use
the OGC Phase 9 (OWS-9) Testbed, to
further develop web-based services,
specifically search and discovery as
outlined in the current Program 3 Strategy
including WFS, WPS etc.
Recommendation 3.2
�The Defence Science and Technology
Organisation (DSTO) be consulted with a
view to linking the Defence Geospatial
Domain to the future infrastructure.
Recommendations 4.1 & 4.2
�CRC-SI use industry partners to assist in
the research into semantic web search
capabilities.
�Industry partners to leverage the research
and resulting capabilities and where
possible commercialise them to assist in
the realisation of a distributed online
marketplace.
Recommendation 5.1
�The lessons learned and knowledge generated
from the ANZSM project be utilised by ANZLIC
and other stakeholders to help inform
discussions on the development of policies and
architectures for spatial information.
Recommendation 6.1
�ANZLIC retain the Spatial Marketplace vision for
the longer term, but will refocus its efforts from
the single portal approach to a distributed online
market. The market can then be underpinned by
the next generation spatial infrastructure and will
become accessible through a range of devices
and channels, including social media.
Recommendation 6.2
�ANZLIC review the ANZSM Principles document
and use it to inform decisions that support
emerging models, technologies and marketplaces
that align with the overall vision.
Recommendations 7.1 & 7.2
�The CRC-SI be given ownership of the
spatial marketplace demonstrator to
extract value from work completed, and to
enable further research and development.
�Ownership of the domains
www.spatialmarketplace.net.au and
www.spatialmarketplace.co.nz to remain
with ANZLIC.
Recommendations 7.3 & 7.4
�The working ANZSM Demonstrator, as
developed up to Friday 9 November 2012,
be formally retired by PSMA Australia.
�The ANZSM Demonstrator code be made
available under creative commons
licensing and made freely available for all
who wish to use it.
Recommendation 7.5
�The Intellectual Property arising from the
ANZSM Demonstrator project be made
freely available.
What next
�ANZLIC to focus on maintaining the vision, developing
foundation data and policies, and standards coordination
across the jurisdictions
�CRCSI to focus on researching the tricky issues –
discoverability, usability, accessibility, data federation
�SIBA to encourage all members to leverage what has
been achieved and what will come to innovate and
compete
And finally …
�Thank you to the Steering Committee and
Technical Reference Group members
�Thank you to all workshop participants
and those who have provided input along
the way
Cathy Crooks
Project Manager, ANZSM
+61 418 377 233
+61 3 9637 8501
@Spatial_Cathy
Brisbane
�Something needs to happen
�Organisational leadership required
�Focus on discoverability
�Evolutionary approach required
�Shouldn’t be driven by government
�Get some easy wins
�People problem, not technology
�Need a robust business case
Melbourne
�Viable business model needed
�Lots of planning and work is required
�Standards are important
�Need commitment from all
�Need to work with current commercial markets
�Can’t just be a government resource
Wellington
�Can’t just be a portal
�Commitment from all sectors
�Critical mass of resources
�Manage quality of resources
�Must be user friendly
�Must use standards
�Good discoverability and access required
�If we don’t do this Google will. Do we want that?
Sydney
�Being able to understand fitness-for-purpose is
key
�Need people who understand business
�Must be attractive to the private sector
�What about engaging non-traditional users?
�We have been here before, sort out the hard
issues
Canberra
�Governance of the marketplace needs to be
resolved
�How do we engage non-traditional users?
�Sustainable structure
�Who is going to pay for this?
�Good idea, but ...
Adelaide
�What is the payment model?
�An opportunity for government and the private
sector
�Business model is important
�Need buy in from all sectors
�Quality of the resources is important
�Long term viability
Perth
�Learn from the ‘lessons learned’
�Need ‘trusted’ relationships
�Discoverable via google
�Challenge is not the technology
�Getting uptake is the challenge
�Linking, not duplicating, infrastructure
Hobart
�What is taking you so long? Get something
working!
�What about aspatial data?
�Need to have authoritative data
�Need to leapfrog technology