United Nations Geographic Information Working Group becomes a Principal Member of the Open Geospatial Consortium
Contact:
Steven Ramage
Executive Director, Marketing and Communications
Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC)
Bergen, Norway
sramage [at] opengeospatial [dot] org
Phone: +47 9862 6865
Content:
23 May 2012, Wayland, Massachusetts. The Open Geospatial Consortium
(OGC®) is pleased to announce that the United Nations Geographic
Information Working Group (UNGIWG) has taken Principal level membership.
The UNGIWG addresses topics related to geospatial information
sharing and quality of location information. The group is working across
the United Nations to improve the efficient use of geographic
information for better decision-making, to promote standards and norms
for maps and other geospatial and location information and to provide a
forum for discussing common issues and emerging technological changes.
The Consortium’s Principal Members together with OGC Strategic
Members constitute the OGC Planning Committee (PC). The PC is the final
authority for approval of OGC standards as well as discussions related
to market and business drivers impacting the standards development focus
of the OGC. Principal members provide valuable expertise to support the
forward-thinking market strategy of the consortium, they influence and
maintain the Consortium's Policies and Procedures, and they approve
nominations to the OGC Board of Directors.
“The UNGIWG's Principal Membership in the OGC reflects the
importance to the UN of efficient and effective sharing of geospatial
information among UN agencies,” said Mark Reichardt, President and CEO
of the OGC. “We look forward to their active involvement in our
process, as they bring expertise, international experience and a
tremendous breadth of requirements that will help shape and advance
future OGC standards and best practices.”
Suha Ulgen, Co-chair of the UNGIWG, said, “It is no coincidence
that UNGIWG’s OGC membership is aligned with the launch of the Centre of
Excellence for UN Spatial Data Infrastructure by UNGIWG. The Centre
will boost the UN’s capacity to leverage the power of geoinformatics in
support of the its many mandates. As a Principal Member, UNGIWG is
looking forward to contributing to the OGC in the standards setting
process, as well as the promulgation of geospatial information
management best practices.”
About the UNGIWG
The United Nations Geographical Information Working Group (UNGIWG,
www.ungiwg.org) is a network of cartography and geographic information
science professionals representing more than 30 United Nations
Secretariat departments, specialized agencies, programmes and funds with
mandates ranging from peacekeeping to humanitarian relief, from climate
change to disaster reduction, response and recovery, from international
law and human rights to environmental protection, poverty reduction,
food security, water management and economic development.
UNGIWG was established in 2000 by acknowledgement of the United
Nations System Chief Executives Board for Coordination (CEB) High Level
Committee on Programmes (HLCP). 2011-2013 UNGIWG Co-chairs are the
Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO) in Vienna,
Austria and the Office of Information and Communications Technology
(OICT) of the UN Secretariat in New York, USA.
About the OGC
The OGC is an international consortium of more than 445 companies,
government agencies, research organizations, and universities
participating in a consensus process to develop publicly available
geospatial standards. OGC standards support interoperable solutions that
"geo-enable" the Web, wireless and location based services, and
mainstream IT. OGC standards empower technology developers to make
geospatial information and services accessible and useful with any
application that needs to be geospatially enabled. Visit the OGC website
at http://www.opengeospatial.org/contact.







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