INSPIRE data to be shared under open terms

From 1 July 2020, INSPIRE spatial polygon datasets which map more than 23 million title extents across England, Wales and Scotland will be available on the Use land and property data service and Registers of Scotland's website.

The new less restricted terms will broaden commercial use, creating opportunities and fuelling innovation in land and property, utility and infrastructure related industries. The news follows the Geospatial Commission's April announcement of the Public Sector Geospatial Agreement (PSGA), including Ordnance Survey' (OS) new freedoms for the publication of property extents.

The PSGA gives access to new data, while improving accessibility and increasing freedoms to share it. This change in OS' derived data policy has paved the way for HM Land Registry and Registers of Scotland (RoS) to improve access to their spatially-enabled INSPIRE datasets. In this case the combined data, detailing over 23 million individual title extents based on the OS MasterMap Topography Layer, is now available under less restrictive terms under Open Government Licence (OGL). The change opens this data up to much broader application across the public and private sectors, particularly in the UK's exciting PropTech space.

Andrew Trigg, Interim Director of Digital, Data and Technology at HM Land Registry, said:

It's an exciting time for geospatial data in the UK. Alongside the Geospatial Commission, OS and RoS, we've been working to enable and encourage colleagues, companies and entrepreneurs to access and apply our data in novel and exciting ways. The first of July will certainly be a milestone to that end, and hopefully one which captures the imagination of everyone from app developers to analysts and helps to unlock the potential in the UK's geospatial industry.

Chris Chambers, Ordnance Survey Head of PSGA, added:

We're excited to see both HM Land Registry and RoS make use of the new freedoms to publish more authoritative data under OGL, as provided by the PSGA. This announcement, aligned with the release of key identifiers UPRN, USRN and TOIDs with geometry, results in significantly more geospatial data being fully open for businesses and developers to use, free and without restrictions. We look forward to seeing the innovation that is stimulated due to these significant changes, and we will continue to work with PSGA members to support them in publishing more of their data under OGL terms.

Janet Egdell, Accountable Officer at Registers of Scotland, said:

This is another key stage in the data-driven journey of RoS. We have been delighted to work with our colleagues in HM Land Registry, OS and the Geospatial Commission in publishing our first spatially-enabled OGL dataset. By providing definitive data under an OGL licence we are opening up new and diverse opportunities for our spatial dataset that demonstrates our ongoing commitment to supporting innovation across the public and private sectors at this challenging time for the economy.

This date also marks the launch of OS' new portal for accessing its data - OS Data Hub, as well as a series of APIs (application programming interface) with up to £1,000 price per calednar month free use of premium data and unlimited use of OS OpenData - all intended to support innovation in the developer community.

/Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.