"National Geospatial Policy 2022" marked a landmark reform that democratized access to geospatial data, liberalised the sector: Dr Jitendra Singh
1. At a Glance
- National Geospatial Policy (NGP) 2022, notified on 28 December 2022 by the Department of Science & Technology (DST), is a citizen-centric framework to liberalise and democratise India's geospatial sector with a vision horizon to 2035 [S2][S3].
- Supersedes the earlier restrictive regime by formalising the February 2021 Geospatial Guidelines, replacing prior approvals with self-certification for Indian entities [S2][S4].
- Examinable for GS-III (Sci-Tech, Economy, Internal Security) and GS-II (Governance); frequently paired with Survey of India, NavIC, ISRO, Digital India in MCQs [S1][S3].
2. Why in the News
- March 2026 — GeodCon-26: Union MoS (IC) S&T Dr Jitendra Singh called NGP 2022 a "landmark reform that democratized access to geospatial data" and stressed geodesy as a strategic national strength under Aatmanirbhar Bharat [S1].
- Recent rollouts of Operation Dronagiri and the Geospatial Data-sharing Interface (GDI) mark milestones under the Policy [S5].
3. Background & Evolution
- Pre-2021: Mapping and geospatial data heavily restricted; required prior approvals/security clearances from Ministry of Defence and Survey of India [S4].
- 15 Feb 2021: DST issued "Guidelines for acquiring and producing Geospatial Data and Geospatial Data Services including Maps" — complete deregulation for Indian entities [S4].
- 28 Dec 2022: National Geospatial Policy 2022 notified, providing statutory-style policy backbone to the 2021 guidelines [S2].
- 2024–25: Launch of Geospatial Data-sharing Interface (GDI) and Operation Dronagiri (pilot for integration of geospatial tech in agriculture, livelihood, logistics) [S5].
4. Core Static Facts
- Notifying body: Department of Science & Technology (DST), Ministry of Science & Technology [S2][S3].
- Nodal survey agency: Survey of India (SoI) — established 1767, oldest scientific department of GoI [S2][S4].
- Vision horizon: long-term roadmap to 2035 [S2].
- Key targets:
- High-resolution topographical survey and mapping of entire country by 2030 [S2].
- Highly accurate Digital Elevation Model (DEM) for entire country [S2].
- Pan-India Continuously Operating Reference Stations (CORS) Network by Survey of India [S2].
- Regulatory shift: prior approvals, security clearances, licences abolished for Indian entities; replaced by self-certification [S2][S4].
- Open data principle: geospatial data generated with public funds (except classified data of security/LEAs) freely accessible [S4].
- Key institutional outputs: Geospatial Data-sharing Interface (GDI), Operation Dronagiri [S5].
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic - Supports USD 5-trillion economy goal; geospatial sector projected as a growth engine in urban planning, logistics, agriculture [S4]. - Enables private-sector innovation via removal of licensing costs; fosters Indian start-up ecosystem in mapping/LBS [S2][S4].
Scientific / Technological - Mandates a DEM, CORS network, high-resolution mapping — foundational layers for AI/ML, drone, IoT applications [S2]. - Integrates with NavIC, ISRO Earth Observation missions for indigenous geospatial stack [S1].
Governance / Administrative - Self-certification model reduces bureaucratic friction; cooperative-federal use across urban planning, disaster mgmt [S2]. - GDI enables seamless inter-departmental data sharing with privacy-preserving protocols [S2].
Strategic / Security - Classified data of security and law-enforcement agencies kept exempt — preserves national security carve-out [S4]. - Indigenous CORS + NavIC reduces dependence on foreign GNSS (GPS, Galileo) [S1].
Social - Citizen-centric: enhances accessibility of locational data for inclusive development, disaster preparedness, agriculture extension [S3].
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- March 2026: GeodCon-26 highlights India's leadership in geodesy; Dr Jitendra Singh emphasises NavIC, EO programmes [S1].
- 2024–25: Operation Dronagiri launched alongside GDI — milestone under NGP 2022 [S5].
- DST PIB feature (Feb 2025): "NGP 2022 — Powering India's Vision for Viksit Bharat" [S2].
7. Prelims Hooks
- NGP 2022 notified on 28 December 2022 [S2].
- Implementing ministry: Ministry of Science & Technology (DST) — not MoEFCC, not MeitY [S2][S3].
- Liberalised Geospatial Guidelines issued 15 February 2021 [S4].
- Nodal mapping agency: Survey of India, founded 1767 [S4].
- Vision horizon of NGP 2022: 2035 [S2].
- High-resolution topographic mapping target year: 2030 [S2].
- CORS = Continuously Operating Reference Stations Network, by SoI [S2].
- GDI = Geospatial Data-sharing Interface [S2][S5].
- Operation Dronagiri is a pilot under NGP 2022 [S5].
- Self-certification replaces prior approvals for Indian entities [S2][S4].
- Classified data of security & law-enforcement agencies exempt from open access [S4].
- NavIC and ISRO EO programmes anchor India's geospatial ecosystem [S1].
8. Mains Relevance
- GS-III — Science & Tech (indigenous tech, Sci-Tech policy), Economy (sectoral reforms), Internal Security (geospatial data & national security).
- GS-II — Governance (regulatory reform, citizen-centric service delivery).
- Probable stems: 1. "The National Geospatial Policy 2022 marks a paradigm shift from a permission-based to a self-certification regime. Discuss its implications for innovation and national security." (GS-III) 2. "Examine how liberalisation of India's geospatial sector aligns with the goals of Aatmanirbhar Bharat and Viksit Bharat 2047." (GS-III) 3. "Discuss the role of Survey of India and the CORS network in operationalising the National Geospatial Policy 2022." (GS-III)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
- Survey of India & CORS network — implementation arm of NGP [S2].
- NavIC (IRNSS) — indigenous regional navigation system feeding geospatial data [S1].
- Indian Space Policy 2023 — parallel liberalisation of space sector.
- Drone Rules 2021 & Drone Shakti — complementary tech ecosystem.
- Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023 — privacy interface with geospatial data.
- Operation Dronagiri & GDI — flagship operational pilots [S5].
- PM Gati Shakti National Master Plan — uses geospatial integration for infra planning.
- ISRO Earth Observation Missions (Cartosat, RISAT) — primary data sources [S1].
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong ministry: NGP is under DST (M/o Science & Technology), NOT MeitY or MoD [S2].
- Confusing dates: Guidelines = Feb 2021; Policy = Dec 2022 — often interchanged in MCQs [S2][S4].
- CORS ≠ NavIC; CORS is a ground-based reference station network of Survey of India, NavIC is ISRO's satellite navigation system [S1][S2].
- "Open to all": Liberalisation applies to Indian entities; foreign entities still face restrictions [S4].
- NGP 2022 is a policy, not an Act — no parliamentary legislation; often misidentified as statutory law [S2].
11. Sources
- [S1] "National Geospatial Policy 2022" marked a landmark reform… Dr Jitendra Singh — https://dst.gov.in/national-geospatial-policy-2022-marked-landmark-reform-democratized-access-geospatial-data — (tier 1)
- [S2] National Geospatial Policy 2022 — Powering India's Vision for Viksit Bharat (PIB feature doc, Feb 2025) — https://static.pib.gov.in/WriteReadData/specificdocs/documents/2025/feb/doc2025227509401.pdf — (tier 1)
- [S3] National Geospatial Policy 2022 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2106569 — (tier 1)
- [S4] Government announces liberalised guidelines for geo-spatial data (PIB, 15 Feb 2021) — https://pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1698196 — (tier 1)
- [S5] Operation Dronagiri launched along with GDI marking a milestone in the National Geospatial Policy — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2073284 — (tier 1)