Dear colleague,

I am emailing you to invite you to join the Geo4All AgriGIS thematic that is 
lead by Dr Didier Leibovici (University of Nottingham, UK ) and Dr. Nobusuke 
Iwasaki ( National Institute for Agro-Environmental Sciences (NIAES), Japan).

Mobile broadband networks, location-based technologies, sensor-web technologies 
and cloud computing offer the potentials to develop location independent, 
sustainable living and to provide flexible and low cost information and 
services networks, linking individuals and communities in a scale that 
transcends national boundaries. Rapid developments in positioning, broad-band 
mobile communications, sensor platforms, sensor-web enablement, spatial search 
and pervasive computing fundamentally change the access to and use of 
location-based data for agriculture. However, the necessary multi-disciplinary 
approach needed to transform raw data and information into useful intelligence 
and knowledge for scientists is still constrained by disciplinary and 
organisational silo's and legacy concepts. Geospatial interoperability and open 
source standards-based GIS and open data will help deliver holistic solutions 
in geospatial technologies in AgriGIS by enabling the ready integration of 
separate location relevant technologies and lowering costs. The expanding range 
of open source GIS tools and open data will greatly enhance the use of 
geospatial technologies in agriculture and facilitates the sharing of 
information across various stakeholders and collaborative work.

To give you some background information, myself and Didier Leibovici in 2012 
established AgriGIS theme [1] at the University of Nottingham through a BBSRC 
funded GRASP research [2] that we were successful in collaboration with Plant 
Science colleagues . The aim of establishing AgriGIS research theme at 
Nottingham was to expand cross-disciplinary research into the application of 
geospatial science to agriculture, in genetic diversity including identifying 
new sources of trait variation, planning breeding objectives with local 
knowledge input, and evaluating the effect of climate change scenarios . We 
also build wider research collaborations with Crops for the Future , Malaysia 
[3] and the Open Source Geospatial Lab, UNMC, Malaysia (Tuong Thuy Vu) [4] 
through various ongoing research (incl. fully funded PhD studentships) and 
AgriGIS workshops [5].

You can get some overview of GRASP from AgriGIS workshop that we held at 
Nottingham https://rd-alliance.org/sites/default/files/AgriGIS2014.pdf

I am also contributing to RDA's Agriculture Data IG and i have presented our 
work at the RDA Agriculture IG session in Dublin in 2014 looking into 
Geospatial interoperability in Agriculture research. I also know the chair of 
the Agriculture IG , Devika Madalli (Indian Statistical Institute, Bangalore) 
and other colleagues in the IG.

https://rd-alliance.org/group/agriculture-data-interest-group-igad/post/geospatial-interoperability-agriculture-research
https://rd-alliance.org/sites/default/files/GRASP_GFS_for_RDA_Dublin2014.pdf

Aiming to expand our AgriGIS research globally, we have been building global 
research collaborations through our involvement in global research initiatives 
like the Research Data Alliance (RDA) ,for example leading the Geospatial IG 
[4]. Research Data Alliance builds the social and technical bridges that enable 
open sharing of data. The RDA vision is researchers and innovators openly 
sharing data across technologies, disciplines, and countries to address the 
grand challenges of society.The Research Data Alliance is supported by the 
European Commission, the National Science Foundation and other U.S. agencies, 
and the Australian Government.Details at https://rd-alliance.org/

I am also in discussions for expanding collaborations with Global Open Data for 
Agriculture and Nutrition (GODAN) initiative [7] . The Global Open Data for 
Agriculture and Nutrition (GODAN) initiative seeks to support global efforts to 
make agricultural and nutritionally relevant data available, accessible, and 
usable for unrestricted use worldwide. The initiative focuses on building 
high-level policy and public and private institutional support for open data. 
The initiative encourages collaboration and cooperation among existing 
agriculture and open data activities, without duplication, and brings together 
all stakeholders to solve long-standing global problem. GODAN has high level 
governmental support (G7, United Nations, FAO) and strong collaborations in 
place with governments worldwide so it is important that we have synergies with 
GODAN and work together AND support the proactive sharing of open data to make 
information about agriculture and nutrition available, accessible and usable to 
deal with the urgent challenge of ensuring world food security.

Capacity Building and Training in the latest geospatial technologies is key for 
staff and students in Agriculture to take advantage of the technological 
innovations in AgriGIS(removing the need for high cost proprietary GI 
software). It will also encourage more collaborations and startups which will 
help accelerate digital economy for the future . This will create innovation 
opportunities globally and locally. For example, the startup community is 
especially open to the use of open software and data avoiding huge licensing 
costs and restrictions which may impact on their business plans, raise early 
start-up costs and restrict their ability to innovate and it frees them of the 
need to use proprietary software and data allowing them greater branding 
freedom and product flexibility.

BBSRC Funded GRASP is a good example of open philosophy (open source, open 
standards, open data, open access ) in AgriGIS research and now with over 100 
dedicated Open Source Geospatial Labs already been established in universities 
and research organisations around the world as part of the "Geo for All" 
initiative in just two year's time, we are now expanding research in AgriGIS 
through our global research labs for this, so please join us at 
https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/geoforall-agrigis  AND let us work 
together to support open principles in Agriculture research to deal with the 
urgent challenge of ensuring world food security.

Best wishes,

Suchith Anand
http://www.geoforall.org


[1] 
https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/ngi/research/geospatial-science/geospatial-science.aspx
[2] 
https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/ngi/research/geospatial-science/projects/grasp-gfs.aspx
[3] http://www.cffresearch.org/
[4] 
http://www.nottingham.edu.my/Geography/Research/GeospatialScience/OSGEO-lab.aspx
[5] 
http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/ngi/documents/news-pdfs/agrigis2012proceedings.pdf
[6] https://rd-alliance.org/groups/geospatial-ig.html
[7] http://www.godan.info




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