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Strategic
goals | Rationale
| Project objectives
State Boundaries of Europe (SBE) is born out of willingness for consistent and quality representation
of the European international boundaries for cross-border and pan-European geographic
information and products.
According to the International Law the definition of a state is based on the “theory of the three elements”, meaning an independent state must have at least these three attributes or elements:
- Territory of a state, containing the definition of this territory and its boundaries;
- People of this state, and
- Their own Authority, i.e. their own legislation and execution.
Bearing this in mind the boundary, an apparently simple feature of a map, actually conceals a complex set of legal, administrative and technical issues. The determination and definition of a common boundary between two states normally is agreed between the two neighbours. These boundary treaties and documents may span a long historical and technical development and thus have a great variety in size, appearance and evidence. Unifying Europe’s geographic data (INSPIRE) it is also necessary to look for the international boundaries of the European states, which justifies the set up of a structured project to address this issue. But it is out of question that the responsibility for the boundary remains at the respective countries.
Thus The State Boundaries of Europe Project's objectives
are :
- Provide and maintain a unique resource for an easy and information
on European boundaries,
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Support to Member NMCAs to identify and solve issues related
to national boundaries,
- Support to pan-European cross-border edge-matching of
Base Reference Information, and derived products, as a tool
of interoperability for INSPIRE and other services.
The
primary State Boundaries of Europe deliverable is the
State Boundaries of Europe Dataset comprising three types
of information:
- ETRS89 coordinates (of highest available accuracy) of
boundary points, marks and lines, with a minimum set of attributes
required for representation and interoperability applications,
- Legal definition of boundaries and related reference documents
(scanned treaties or maps, etc),
- Topographic features related to or crossing the boundary
line.
The Project's phases:
- 2004-2007 : proof and development of concept, focus on borders on land;
- 2008 onwards: continuous implementation of the data model and boundary data;
- 2008: start of working group for borders at sea.
Strategic
goals
The
EuroGeographics strategy for serving Reference Information
requires consistency between the datasets
at different scale ranges. One of the issues to be solved
for implementation of this strategy is the cross-border
edge matching.
This ‘State Boundaries of Europe’ dataset, or range of datasets
(at different resolution levels), would be seen as a building
block of the ESDI, the common European GI infrastructure promoted
by the INSPIRE initiative. Closer to the requirements of EuroGeographics
and its members, the ‘State Boundaries of Europe’ dataset
would provide a framework to facilitate the maintenance and
convergence of our common pan-European products ( EuroGlobalMap,
EuroRegionalMap, EuroBoundaryMap / former SABE), and also support the implementation of large
scale interoperability projects such as EuroRoadS and EuroSpec.
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Rationale
A growing number of GI data users, as well as data integrators
or service providers are requiring an agreed standard set
of national boundaries. This requirement is expressed both
by the institutional and by the private sector, at the European
as well as at the global level (acute demand from the UN Cartographic
Section and the UNGIWG, and the Global Map project).
Indeed, there are as many boundary representations as there
are individual datasets, as pan-European projects (EuroBoundaryMap, EuroGlobalMap,
EuroRegionalMap …) and cross-border projects have well
demonstrated. Each of these projects, and more, had to establish
their own view of the common national boundaries, due to the
fact that in many cases national or bilateral representations of the boundaries are not consistent.
Nowadays it is self-evident and envisaged by INSPIRE that Geographic Information offers solutions for seamless data sets across boundaries – boundaries between countries, or between data providers. While technology is making significant progress in data integration, no mechanisms are yet being designed for cross border geometric, topologic and semantic integration. State Boundaries of Europe will fill that gap by providing the core data, the agreed ‘ultimate’ boundary representation that will allow operating the cross border plugging mechanisms of GI services.
This approach is very timely, when implementation of the common
European coordinate system ETRS89 at the national level
is spreading, when simultaneously national cadastre and mapping data
are linked, requiring the definition of the boundaries at high accuracy kevels, i.e. on the base of theagreed boundary treaties and boundary documents.
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Project objectives
The State Boundaries of Europe project offers a solution to the issues
related to cross border geometric and topologic integration
by aiming at providing a net of agreed lines and points, to
which individual dataset can be plugged in, in order to create
a seamless whole.
Therefore the project’s main objective is to create
a State Boundaries of Europe dataset, on the base of a common data model and
a data network in Europe. This would cover at least the EU,
ideally the whole European continent. The
first step of this project is set for boundaries on land; a second step would include boundaries on the sea.
The State Boundaries of Europe database will be of the highest
available accuracy; however, it must be flexible
in order to the actual
data availability. Completeness, coverage, and date of release
are important criteria. Thus the assembly of the State Boundaries of Europe
data base will be incremental, starting with
available data, and being improved and completed by then finished boundary data.
A secondary objective, yet very valuable, is the formation
of a community of interested experts, who will share knowledge
and exchange information between the different actors related
to or dealing with boundary matters, and the probable identification of good practices in solving efficiently and economically these issues.
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