Prof.Guo Huadong ISDE elnök és Prof. Kamal Labbassi a zászlóceremónián Sydneyben. Forrás: a DES2018 weboldala |
Kamal Labbssi AARSE főtitkár a DES-2018 házigazdája. Fotó: RFG |
A "7th Digital Earth Summit 2018" (DES-2018) szakmai programját a konferencia weboldalán a következő hetekben hozzák nyilvánosságra.
A DES2018 előadáskivonat címe |
A konferencia témaköre “The Digital Earth for Sustainable Development in Africa”, amelyhez jól igazodik a magyar hozzájárulás.
A konferencia helyszíne és időpontja: El Jadida, Marokkó, 2018. április 17-19
A rendezvényt szervezők az International Society for Digital Earth (ISDE) és a Chouaib Douakkali University (UCD). Szervezőpartnereik az African Association of Remote Sensing of the Environment (AARSE) és a Moroccan Association of Remote Sensing of the Environment (MARSE), az Afrikai illetve Marokkói Környezetvédelmi Távérzékelési Társulás.
A szerzők az MFTTT tagjai. Az előadást terv szerint az a szerzőtárs tartja meg, aki egyben az ISDE örökös tagja is.
Az előadáskivonat szövege a következő:
DIGITAL EARTH TECHNOLOGIES FOR SDGS - SHARING EXPERIENCES IN STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT ON NATIONAL LEVEL
Keywords:
UN 2030 Agenda, Sustainable Development Goals, Earth Observation, Geospatial Information, Spatial Data Infrastructure, ICT, Digital Earth Technologies
Authors:
Prof. Dr. Szabolcs MIHÁLY,
mihaly.szabolcs43@gmail.com, Member, Hungarian Society of Surveying, Mapping and Remote Sensing (MFTTT),
Address: Bosnyák tér 5, 1149 Budapest, Hungary
Tamás PALYA
palya.tamas@bfkh.gov.hu, Government Office of the Capital City Budapest, Department of Geodesy, Remote Sensing and Land Offices.
Address: Bosnyák tér 5, 1149 Budapest, Hungary
Dr. Gábor REMETEY-FÜLÖPP
gabor.remetey@gmail.com, Life Member, International Society for Digital Earth (ISDE) Address: Zöldlomb utca 52-54, 1025 Budapest, Hungary
Monitoring and reporting of the targets and their indicators of the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN 2030 Agenda (2016-2030) requires innovative and cost-effective support provided by the Digital Earth technologies including EO/ICT/Geospatial Information. Considering the spatial nature of the majority of indicators to be monitored, the need for spatiotemporal analysis capabilities is imperative and the fact, they have to be disaggregated also by geographic location where appropriate, it upgrades the value of EO/Spatial Data Infrastructures and related interoperable services and calls for coordinated, interdisciplinary collaboration with special emphasis on the national statistics.
The early engagement of the stakeholders from Academia, Private sector, NGOs and Governmental agencies is critical. Awareness raising actions addressing the data custodians, value added products providers and the scientific/educational institutions with the aim to bring the potential cooperating organisations together will facilitate the achievement of the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Started in February 2017, awareness raising campaign was executed on national level by volunteer members of the Hungarian Society of Surveying, Mapping and Remote Sensing (MFTTT), actually the former and the present national INSPIRE delegates as well as the national correspondent to the Group of Earth Observations (GEO) and liaison of the Global Spatial Data Infrastructure Association (GSDI) to the Working Group of Information Systems and Services (WGISS) of, the Committee of Earth Observation systems (CEOS), the satellite arm of GEO.
The steadily developed content shared with the communities during the campaign includes some milestones of the evolution of the UN 2030 Agenda, the challenging impact on the EO/Geospatial communities, the role of EO/GI data in the SDGs context based on GEO, GGIM, EO4SDGs, CEOS findings as well as the major stakeholders and their role in Hungary.
The addressed communities of the national level campaign include experts in surveying, mapping, photogrammetry, image processing and remote sensing, ICT professionals, public servants of the Land Administration, prime and thematic geospatial data and service providers, experts in geoinformatics and in Good State and Governance.
The way ahead in the achievement of the SDGs might include awareness raising relating to
- citizen science addressing the general public using web based-solutions to engage them as sensors, basic interpreters, participatory role in data collection, or even problem definition and analysis,
- engagement of the stakeholder emphasizes the shift from multidisciplinarity to interdisciplinarity and transdisciplinarity,
- the wider use of open data and open tools,
- the necessity of adoption of SDGs-related capacity building on how to use emerging Digital Earth technologies and innovative approach in the field of EO/ICT/SDI,
- the imperative need for cooperation, collaboration and cooperation in line with the UN guidelines and the respectively national strategy on SDGs.
Having mandate to formulate a vision for future EU Research and Innovation, the Lamy Group[1] of the European Commission on maximize the impact of EU’s investment in research and innovation explicitly addressed the UN sustainability goals and highlighted issues as multidisciplinarity and the international collaboration. Its fifth strategic recommendation says: adopt a mission oriented impact-focused approach to address global challenges by setting research and innovation missions as action that address global challenges and mobilizes researchers, innovators and other stakeholders to realise them.”
Now the paper is just dealing with this to share experiences on engagement of stakeholders on national level in the context of the SDGs.
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