Toward the Evolution of National Spatial Data Infrastructure Development in Indonesia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. NSDI Development in Indonesia
2.1. Overview
2.2. Problem Identification
3. NSDI Stakeholder Analysis and Cost Analysis
3.1. Stakeholder Analysis
3.1.1. Identification of NSDI Stakeholders
3.1.2. Categorization of NSDI Stakeholders
3.1.3. Relationships of NSDI Stakeholders
3.2. Cost Analysis
3.2.1. Cost of NSDI Implementation
3.2.2. Cost for Completing Basic Maps
4. Discussion
- The head of government of Indonesia has good awareness about the geospatial information benefits of supporting the national development program. The understanding is represented in the National Medium Term Development Plan (RPJMN) 2015-2019. The support is also demonstrated with the establishment of the One Map Policy.
- Geospatial Information Law was established in 2011 as the legal foundation of NSDI development. The law is reinforced by the issuance of several government regulations such as Government Regulation No. 9/2014 and Presidential Decree No. 27/2014. These regulations act as an umbrella for the NSDI initiative.
- The national geoportal is available as the key product of NSDI development. It provides geospatial data to users and facilitates sharing and the exchange of geographic services among the stakeholders.
- The government has published geospatial information standards to support interoperability and harmonize technical specifications. Currently, there are 60 standards available, including standards of metadata, data quality, web services, and data collection.
- Participation of institutions in the NSDI network is low. According to the stakeholder analysis, BIG and central government agencies are active participants. Local governments are hampered by their lack of available resources, whereas private sectors are constrained by their limited roles in NSDI implementation.
- There are insufficient human resources with skills in the GIS field. As mentioned in the interview activities, provincial and municipal/district governments often experience fast rotation of employees. GIS departments in local governments hardly exist, and staff members who were not part of any particular department executed GIS tasks repeatedly [17]. Lack of GIS employees was also recognized by the other stakeholders, including state institutions, national police, and national armed forces.
- Incomplete large-scale basic geospatial data are available. Because the obtainable data are mostly in medium scale (1:25,000), local governments have difficulties in conducting urban planning and land management.
- Although the legal foundations have been established, the NSDI grand design has not been created yet. The grand design is important, as it provides visions, action plans, and time management for the implementation. The absence of this guidance may lead to obscurity of the project activities for participating institutions.
- There is growing awareness of geospatial information in society. People are now starting to use maps in their daily lives, for example, to order online transportation (e.g., Grab) or food delivery service (e.g., Uber Eats). The demand for geospatial-related applications can be an opportunity to leverage NSDI data and services.
- The government has launched the open data initiative, and one of its benefits is that geospatial data can be downloaded freely. This encourages interactions between public authorities and private companies and may help generate value-added products.
- There are emerging trends in GIS application such as remote sensing, global navigation satellite system, cloud computing, and internet of things. Adopting state-of-the-art technologies will provide the innovation for geospatial applications to support public services.
- Local governments consider internet and ICT infrastructures to be a barrier to publishing geospatial data and communicating with the national geoportal.
- Reluctance to share geospatial data among NSDI institutions was identified during the interviews. The representatives argued that misuse of data, ownership, and privacy issues are the major concerns.
- Sustainable funding for supporting NSDI activities only exists at BIG and central government agencies. Financial support from other key stakeholders is unreliable.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Representatives of the Semi-Structured Interviews
ID | Name of Institution | Type of Institution | Position |
---|---|---|---|
Int1 | Center for Regional Potential Development of West Java Province | Provincial government | Head of Regional Potential Analysis as Local SDI Coordinator |
Int2 | Ministry of Public Works and Public Housing | Ministry | Head of Information Technology Service Section as SDI Coordinator in the ministry |
Int3 | National Land Agency (BPN) | Central government agency | Analyst of the Information System Network |
Int4 | Ministry of Environment and Forestry | Ministry | Head of Management of Geospatial Data Network Section as SDI Coordinator in the ministry |
Int5 | Regional Development Planning Agency of Depok Municipality | Municipal government | Head of Research & Development Subdivision as Local SDI Manager |
Int6 | Geospatial Information Agency (BIG) | Central government agency | Head of Dissemination of Geospatial Information Division |
Int7 | Spatial Planning and Land Agency of DKI Jakarta Province | Provincial government | Head of Land Division |
Int8 | Ministry of Agriculture | Ministry | Analyst of Agricultural Data and Information |
Int9 | PT. ESRI Indonesia | Private company (GIS software provider) | Director of National Government Affairs |
Int10 | PT. Waindo SpecTerra | Private company (survey and mapping) | Information Technology Manager |
Int11 | PT. Tiza Solusindo | Private Company (GIS application developer) | Managing Director |
Int12 | PT. Qlue Performa Indonesia | Private company (GIS application developer) | Strategist for Public and Government Affairs |
Int13 | PT. PAM Lyonnase Jaya | Private company (water supply service) | GIS Manager |
Int14 | PT. WebGIS Indonesia | Private company (Web mapping developer) | Chief Executive Officer |
Int15 | PT. Bank Muamalat Indonesia | Private company (banking and finance) | Director of Information Technology |
Int16 | University of Gadjah Mada (UGM) | Academic (center for SDI development) | Head of Center for SDI Development of UGM |
Int17 | Bandung Institute of Technology (ITB) | Academic (center for SDI development) | Head of Center for SDI Development of ITB |
Int18 | University of Pakuan Bogor | Academic | GIS Lecturer and Researcher |
Appendix B. Indicator of the Stakeholders’ Features in the NSDI Stakeholder Analysis
NSDI Determinants | Indicators |
---|---|
Geospatial data provision | 1 = No geospatial data available 2 = Non-GIS data format available 3 = Basic geospatial data available 4 = Basic and thematic data available 5 = All of the above, and the data conform with the national catalog |
Technological infrastructure | 1 = No GIS software/hardware and internet network 2 = GIS software or internet network available 3 = GIS software/hardware and internet network available 4 = GIS software/hardware, GIS server, and internet network available 5 = All of the above, and the geoportal and dedicated data center available |
Financial resource | 1 = No budget for data provision and dissemination 2 = Incidental (non-routine) budget 3 = Small annual budget (<IDR 1 billion/US$ 74,000 1) 4 = Medium annual budget (IDR 1–5 billion/US$ 74,000–370,000) 5 = Large annual budget (>IDR 5 billion/US$ 370,00) |
Human capacity | 1 = No GIS workers available 2 = Small number of GIS workers available (1–5 people) 3 = Several GIS workers available (6–10 people) 4 = Large number of GIS workers available (>10 people) 5 = Large number of professional GIS workers available |
No. | Stakeholder | Data Provision | Technological Infrastructure | Human Capacity | Financial Resource |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | BIG | 5.0 | 5.0 | 5.0 | 5.0 |
2. | Central Government Agencies | 4.6 | 4.8 | 4.4 | 4.8 |
3. | State Institutions | 2.0 | 2.0 | 2.0 | 2.0 |
4. | Provincial Government | 4.0 | 4.2 | 2.0 | 3.8 |
5. | Municipality/District Government | 3.3 | 2.5 | 2.3 | 2.0 |
6. | National Police | 2.0 | 2.0 | 2.0 | 1.0 |
7. | National Armed Forces | 3.0 | 3.0 | 3.0 | 3.0 |
8. | PPIDS | 4.0 | 4.0 | 3.0 | 3.0 |
9. | Survey and Mapping Companies | 3.0 | 4.0 | 4.0 | 3.0 |
10. | Geospatial Application Developers | 3.0 | 4.0 | 4.0 | 3.0 |
11. | GIS Software Providers | 3.0 | 4.0 | 4.0 | 3.0 |
12. | NGOs/NPOs | 3.0 | 3.0 | 2.0 | 2.0 |
13. | Lecturers and Researchers | 3.0 | 3.0 | 2.0 | 2.0 |
14. | Students | 3.0 | 3.0 | 2.0 | 2.0 |
15. | Citizens | 1.0 | 2.0 | 1.0 | 1.0 |
Appendix C. Details of the Cost Estimation of 1:5000 Scale Topographic Mapping by Aerial Photo Method
Procedure | Sub-Procedure | Activity | Cost Component | Cost (IDR) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Data Processing | Project preparation | - Preparation of tools and personnel - Creation of working plan | Work forces Stationery Work forces Tools Stationery | 53,000,000 260,000 26,500,000 5,374,000 312,540 |
- Report writing | Work forces | 3,900,000 | ||
Tools | 8,220,000 | |||
Stationery | 260,000 | |||
Data preparation | - Preparation of tools and personnel | Work forces | 3,080,000 | |
Tools | 585,000 | |||
- Data assessment | Work forces | 3,080,000 | ||
Tools | 335,000 | |||
- Report writing | Work forces | 6,160,000 | ||
Tools | 1,020,000 | |||
Stationery | 260,000 | |||
Subtotal Preparation | 112,346,540 | |||
Stereo plotting | - Preparation of tools and personnel | Work forces | 930,800 | |
Tools | 871,700 | |||
- Stereo plotting all objects | Work forces | 1,619,650,000 | ||
Tools | 1,081,700,000 | |||
- Report writing | Work forces | 6,160,000 | ||
Tools | 1,020,000 | |||
Stationery | 260,000 | |||
Subtotal Stereo Plotting | 2,710,592,500 | |||
Topology editing | - Preparation of tools and personnel | Work forces | 930,800 | |
Tools | 521,700 | |||
- Topology creation and editing | Work forces | 80,982,500 | ||
Tools | 23,635,000 | |||
- Polygon creation and editing | Work forces | 80,982,500 | ||
Tools | 23,635,000 | |||
- Report writing | Work forces | 6,160,000 | ||
Tools | 1,020,000 | |||
Stationery | 260,000 | |||
Subtotal Topology Editing | 218,127,500 | |||
Digital terrain model (DTM) creation | - Preparation of tools and personnel | Work forces | 930,800 | |
Tools | 521,700 | |||
- DTM creation and editing | Work forces | 215,951,400 | ||
Tools | 63,028,600 | |||
- Report writing | Work forces | 6,160,000 | ||
Tools | 1,020,000 | |||
Stationery | 260,000 | |||
Contour editing | - Preparation of tools and personnel | Work forces | 930,800 | |
Tools | 521,700 | |||
- Contour editing | Work forces | 323,930,000 | ||
Tools | 94,540,000 | |||
- Spot height creation | Work forces | 107,978,600 | ||
Tools | 31,511,400 | |||
- Report writing | Work forces | 6,160,000 | ||
Tools | 1,020,000 | |||
Stationery | 260,000 | |||
Subtotal DTM and Contour Editing | 854,725,000 | |||
Field Survey | Survey preparation | - Preparation of tools and personnel | Work forces | 930,800 |
Tools | 487,800 | |||
- Mobilization | Work forces | 3,660,000 | ||
Transportation | 1,400,000 | |||
- Coordination | Work forces | 4,654,100 | ||
Transportation | 8,474,450 | |||
Tools | 593,750 | |||
- Demobilization | Work forces | 3,660,000 | ||
Transportation | 1,400,000 | |||
- Secondary data collection | Work forces | 1,861,600 | ||
Tools | 525,000 | |||
- Creation of manuscript map | Work forces | 35,093,480 | ||
Tools | 13,142,800 | |||
Stationery | 18,127,320 | |||
- Detailed survey planning | Work forces | 930,800 | ||
Tools | 262,500 | |||
- Survey form | Work forces | 15,500 | ||
Tools | 3,050 | |||
Stationery | 260,000 | |||
- Report development | Work forces | 6,160,000 | ||
Tools | 1,020,000 | |||
Stationery | 260,000 | |||
Field survey | - Preparation of tools and personnel | Work forces | 1,680,800 | |
Tools | 1,844,450 | |||
- Mobilization | Work forces | 7,410,000 | ||
Transportation | 1,400,000 | |||
- Verification of topographic feature | Work forces | 61,514,800 | ||
Transportation | 46,162,200 | |||
Tools | 41,945,600 | |||
- Boundary identification | Work forces | 38,448,200 | ||
Transportation | 28,849,200 | |||
Tools | 26,216,000 | |||
- Toponym collection | Work forces | 553,668,000 | ||
Transportation | 415,465,600 | |||
Tools | 377,493,000 | |||
- Accuracy test | Work forces | 4,627,600 | ||
Transportation | 3,523,400 | |||
Tools | 5,398,000 | |||
- Data processing | Work forces | 60,476,600 | ||
Tools | 87,701,800 | |||
- Demobilization | Work forces | 5,160,000 | ||
Transportation | 1,400,000 | |||
- Report writing | Work forces | 6,160,000 | ||
Tools | 1,020,000 | |||
Stationery | 260,000 | |||
Subtotal Field Survey | 1,880,748,200 | |||
Geodatabase | Feature editing | - Preparation of tools and personnel | Work forces | 930,800 |
Tools | 521,700 | |||
- Feature and attribute editing | Work forces | 269,943,600 | ||
Tools | 78,781,400 | |||
- Edge matching | Work forces | 64,786,000 | ||
Tools | 18,908,000 | |||
Topology validation | - Topology editing and validation | Work forces | 2,327,080 | |
Tools | 679,170 | |||
Subtotal Feature Editing and Topology Validation | 436,877,750 | |||
Metadata creation | - Metadata editing | Work forces | 8,021,600 | |
Tools | 1,813,400 | |||
Stationery | 260,000 | |||
Subtotal Metadata Creation | 10,095,000 | |||
Visualization | Map presentation | - Preparation of tools and personnel | Work forces | 930,800 |
Tools | 575,300 | |||
- Lay outing | Work forces | 132,980 | ||
Tools | 35,470 | |||
- Map printing | Work forces | 66,480 | ||
Tools | 149,480 | |||
Stationery | 806,540 | |||
- Final report writing | Work forces | 15,910,000 | ||
Tools | 3,070,000 | |||
Stationery | 9,352,000 | |||
Subtotal Visualization | 31,029,050 |
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Period | Institution of NSDI Operation | Data Policy | Technological Changes | Users |
---|---|---|---|---|
Centralized Data (1991–2000) | Bakosurtanal | Pay for digital geospatial data (e.g., US$ 35/map sheet for a 1:25,000 topographic map) | Desktop geographic information system and geodatabase | National government agencies and the local government |
Distributed System (2001–2010) | Bakosurtanal as the coordinating agency; other national agencies as participants | Pay for digital geospatial data | Web mapping and clearinghouse | National government agencies, local government, academia, and non-profit organizations |
Open Initiative (2011–present) | Badan Informasi Geospasial (formerly Bakosurtanal) acting as the network nodes connector; ministries/national agencies and local governments as network nodes | Public and open data; digital base maps available for download | Geoportal, participatory mapping, and mobile applications | National government agencies, local government, academia, non-profit organizations, and web mapping companies |
No. | Stakeholder | Interest | Power to Influence |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Badan Informasi Geospasial (BIG) |
| Functions as a network node connector (Presidential Decree No. 27/2014) |
2. | Central Government Agencies |
| Function as network nodes |
3. | State Institutions | - Collect basic geospatial data | Function as network nodes |
4. | Provincial Government |
| Functions as a network node |
5. | Municipality/District Government |
| Functions as a network node |
6. | National Police | - Collects topographic maps and thematic data | Functions as a network node |
7. | National Armed Forces | - Collect topographic maps and thematic data | Function as a network node |
8. | Pusat Pengembangan Infrastruktur Data Spasial |
| Has a memorandum of understanding with BIG |
9. | Survey and Mapping Companies | - Collect basic and thematic data | Act as NSDI users (not members of the network nodes) |
10. | Geospatial Application Developers |
| Act as NSDI users |
11. | Geographic Information System Software Providers |
| Act as NSDI users |
12. | Non-Governmental/Non-Profit Organizations |
| Act as NSDI users |
13. | Lecturers/Researchers |
| Act as NSDI users |
14. | Students |
| Act as NSDI users |
15. | Citizens | - Access Ina-Geoportal | Act as NSDI users |
No. | Stakeholder | Connection(s) |
---|---|---|
1. | Badan Informasi Geospasial | 5 strong, 4 weak |
2. | Central Government Agencies | 2 strong, 4 weak |
3. | State Institutions | No connections |
4. | Provincial Government | 3 strong, 4 weak |
5. | Municipality/District Government | 3 strong, 4 weak |
6. | National Police | No connections |
7. | National Armed Forces | 1 strong |
8. | Pusat Pengembangan Infrastruktur Data Spasial | 1 strong, 2 weak |
9. | Survey and Mapping Companies | 4 strong, 1 weak |
10. | Geospatial Application Developers | 4 weak |
11. | Geographic Information System Software Providers | 5 weak |
12. | Non-Governmental/Non-Profit Organizations | 1 weak |
13. | Lecturers and Researchers | 1 weak |
14. | Students | 1 weak |
15. | Citizens | 1 weak |
Procedure | Sub-Procedure | Cost (IDR) | Cost1 (USD) |
---|---|---|---|
Data processing | - Preparation | 112,346,540 | 8322 |
- Stereo plotting | 2,710,592,500 | 200,785 | |
- Topology editing | 218,127,500 | 16,158 | |
- Digital terrain model creation and contour editing | 854,725,000 | 63,313 | |
Field survey | 1,880,748,200 | 139,315 | |
Geodatabase | - Feature editing and topology validation | 436,877,750 | 32,361 |
- Metadata creation | 10,095,000 | 748 | |
Visualization | 31,029,050 | 2,298 | |
Total cost for 58 mapsheets | 6,254,541,540 | 463,300 | |
Unit cost per mapsheet | 107,963,871 | 7,988 |
© 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Putra, T.Y.D.; Sekimoto, Y.; Shibasaki, R. Toward the Evolution of National Spatial Data Infrastructure Development in Indonesia. ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2019, 8, 263. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi8060263
Putra TYD, Sekimoto Y, Shibasaki R. Toward the Evolution of National Spatial Data Infrastructure Development in Indonesia. ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information. 2019; 8(6):263. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi8060263
Chicago/Turabian StylePutra, Tandang Yuliadi Dwi, Yoshihide Sekimoto, and Ryosuke Shibasaki. 2019. "Toward the Evolution of National Spatial Data Infrastructure Development in Indonesia" ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information 8, no. 6: 263. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi8060263
APA StylePutra, T. Y. D., Sekimoto, Y., & Shibasaki, R. (2019). Toward the Evolution of National Spatial Data Infrastructure Development in Indonesia. ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information, 8(6), 263. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi8060263