Mapping and geospatial systems in India have remained fragmented across agencies with limited interoperability and access. The National Geospatial Policy, 2022, sought to break this belief by advocating open access to foundational geospatial data and greater private sector participation. Now comes the effort to translate the vision into practice of a collaboration between the Survey of India, the country’s oldest scientific mapping agency and C.E. Info Systems Pvt. Ltd., also known as MapmyIndia.
The collaboration will establish a state-of-the-art in National Geo-Spatial Platform, visioned as a central hub for integrating, managing and disseminating spatial data on India. It’s a digital backbone which provides secure access to reliable, standardized and updated geospatial information to ministries, researchers, startups and citizens.
What this Platform Will Do
The newly launched National Geo-Spatial Platform aims to aggregate, standardize and disseminate through a single platform the foundational geospatial datasets that will form the backbone of the digital mapping ecosystem in India. This will include high-precision Ortho-Rectified Imagery, which is satellite imagery corrected for terrain and camera distortions. Digital Elevation Model will provide accurate information regarding India’s topography and verified Administrative Boundaries covering national, state, district and village levels with accurate coordinates.
It will also integrate a standardized Geodetic Reference Frame for uniform mapping and accuracy across dataset. Along with an integrated Geographical Names Database that contains authenticated nomenclature for locations across the country. These datasets will be made available under the initiative through web services, API and mobile applications that allow seamless integration across platforms and users. The unified system will prevent duplication of efforts, enhance decision-making, and promote evidence-based governance across many sectors.
Key Components of the National Geo-Spatial Platform
The project consists of three major components:
- Geospatial Data Integration & Dissemination System (G-DIDS): a central repository unit and distribution hub for harmonized data.
- IGAI: Integrated Geospatial Application Interface creates a safe interface for various governmental departments, researchers and industries to build applications based on shared data.
- Spatial Data Registry (SDR): This is a metadata management framework that makes sure all datasets meet quality, format and access standards.
Together these components will create an interoperable ecosystem linking Central and State agencies, academia and the private sector.
Why India Needs It Now
Planning highways to monitor natural resources. India’s economy and governance increasingly depend upon geospatial intelligence. Most of the geospatial data was scattered, outdated or restricted till date. Ministries have been using different datasets, resulting in duplication of efforts and inefficiency in this process, leading to delays in policy implementation.
The National Geo-Spatial Platform does this by bringing in “One Nation, One Map” a single authoritative source for foundational data. Tuning with Digital India, Smart Cities Mission and the Gati Shakti National Master Plan, all these schemes depend on integrated spatial datasets for planning in infrastructure, logistics and resource allocation.
The platform supports disaster management, climate modelling, agricultural forecasting and sustainable land use, which requires accurate location information. According to the 2023 report by NITI Aayog, titled Geospatial Infrastructure suggests that unified data access can bring down by planning up to the level of 30% and enhances implementation efficiency across infrastructure and social welfare projects.
Driving Aatmanirbhar Geospatial Capability
For decades, India remained dependent on the import of satellite imagery and mapping solutions. With this initiative, country is taking a decisive step toward Aatmanirbhar Bharat in geospatial technology.
Participation by a domestic company C.E. Info Systems Pvt. Ltd., reflects the government’s effort to empower Indian enterprises to innovate within regulated frameworks.
This initiative also supports the liberalization of geospatial data in 2021, thus allowing Indian firms to generate, process and distribute mapping data without prior approvals. The National Geo-Spatial Platform now provides the institutional infrastructure needed to support that reform to ensure both accessibility and security.
Benefits Across Sectors
- Governance and Policy: Allows different ministries to derive correct and updated geospatial data over rural mapping, property records, urban expansion and infrastructure monitoring.
- Disaster Management: Real-time mapping assists in flood modelling, tracking forest fires and relief logistics.
- Industry and Innovation: Opens up new avenues for startups in industries like logistics, autonomous vehicles, precision agriculture and renewable energy mapping.
- Academic Research: Universities receive authenticated data regarding spatial analysis, environmental studies and resource planning.
- Citizen Services: Enhances applications pertaining to land records, navigation and civic services with accurate public data layers.
It is estimated by the Department of Science and Technology that the geospatial economy could grow from ₹31,000 crore in 2021 to more than ₹75,000 crore by 2030, supported by such open-data initiatives.
It will conform to national geospatial data standards and be ISO-certified in terms of quality, metadata and interoperability. Access controls will ensure that the sensitive data of defence or strategic installations are protected. The Spatial Data Registry records all the datasets and their requirements, it also ensures that full transparency and reliability are maintained. This approach balances open access with national security is a key concern in geospatial data governance.
Institutional Synergy for a Spatially Enabled Nation
The leadership of the Survey of India has ensured, that this platform works in tune with India’s overall geospatial reforms. The collaboration also strengthens SoI traditional role as the nodal agency for the creation of base maps, established in 1767 and modernized under the Ministry of Science & Technology.
Continuous updating, cross-ministerial coordination and industry participation is the key aspects underlined in the National Geospatial Policy, 2022, which has made the project successful. The convergence of government data, private technology and citizen applications on a single platform mark a strategic shift away from data silos toward data synergy.
NPG is more than an upgrade on technology, it is an infrastructure of governance. It empowers the highest level of decision-making, from village planning to national missions-with authenticated, interoperable and accessible spatial data. In building this platform, India is not just mapping its territory, it is mapping its future.



















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