Dear all,
Please see attached a paper by Datameet <http://datameet.org/> and CIS 
<http://cis-india.org/>. This paper seeks to take one step forward in the 
direction of better water data, by highlighting currently available data 
relevant to water resources mgmt, generated from remote sensing sources, 
Govt sources, citizen sources and other relevant global meteorological data.The 
idea for this paper arose from a need that was felt for strategies to 
address the lack of easily accessible open data in the water sector. The 
government at different levels effectively operates as the monopoly in 
monitoring the status of water resources in the country. Hence their 
shortcomings in making water data available affects the ability of 
researchers, civil society groups, businesses and citizens to understand 
the degree of water availability and demand, thereby making more 
sustainable decisions challenging.
​
 Open Water Data in India.docx 
<https://docs.google.com/a/datameet.org/document/d/1lo3b1EQbqe3yZIDnY9b3RL9Eo7w1dKk6FOu2OaMbgyc/edit?usp=drive_web>
​
The paper discusses specifications of different datasets, including 
information such as duration of data availability, spatial and temporal 
resolution, data formats, licenses, methods of access etc. The paper also 
compares these different datasets to assign a simple 'open data' score to 
each dataset. Links to relevant resources to understand and use each of the 
datasets have been listed. Though many datasets are highlighted the authors 
of the paper wish to make clear that no single data source must be 
considered accurate without question. 

The hope driving this initiative is that a conversation opens up around 
these datasets beyond small academic communities. Once the data in question 
is openly available to all concerned stakeholder groups, only then can the 
quality of the debate around water data evolve. Working groups of multiple 
stakeholders deliberating on open data we hope could lead to better 
knowledge of the state of water resources. We request that you take some 
time to browse through the paper and offer your thoughts, comments, 
questions and feedback. General feedback via mail to p...@datameet.org and 
specific feedback as comments in the Google Doc. 

Even after highlighting the availability of this data hurdles to access 
water data still remain because as it stands currently using these datasets 
is technically challenging. Hence in addition to this effort Datameet is 
also working towards building an open access web platform that simplifies 
access to these datasets even further. This tool would also allow 
juxtaposing community collected water data alongside global and national 
datasets, not just for visualization but also for analysis and 'bottom-up' 
model building. While this is a long term effort, the first iteration of 
this tool will be shared with you in the coming weeks.

We welcome collaborations with water sector professionals (especially field 
researchers), civil society groups, RS & GIS professionals and also 
especially web developers in this work. Do mail us to discuss more.

Regards
Datameet & CIS
Craig, Namita, Jinda, Riddhi, Nisha, Sumandro

-- 
Datameet is a community of Data Science enthusiasts in India. Know more about 
us by visiting http://datameet.org
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"datameet" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to datameet+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to