Maps and Geospatial Data in India–Regime Liberalized


On February 15, 2021, the Department of Science and Technology of the Government of India (“DST”) issued “Guidelines for acquiring and producing geospatial data and geospatial data services including Maps” (“Guidelines”) which apply to all Geospatial Data,1 Maps,2 and other products and services offered by government bodies, individuals and private organizations. Under these Guidelines, the Government has not only recognized the crucial role played by Geospatial Data / Maps in the digital economy as well as traditional sectors, but has also significantly liberalized the erstwhile licensing regime.

BACKGROUND

To provide some context, prior to the Guidelines, geospatial data and maps were regulated by various policies, notifications and official memoranda issued by the Survey of India (“SOI”), Ministry of Finance (“MoF”), Ministry of Defence (“MoD”), among others. Some of the key policies/regulations are as follows:

  1. The Government of India had published the National Map Policy in 20053 and subsequently, SOI published certain guidelines for its implementation.4 Both largely pertained to dissemination and licensing of maps prepared by SOI and did not address the generation or dissemination of maps by private entities.

  2. MoD had issued instructions in relation to preparation and publication of maps, with the most recent instructions having been published through an office memorandum dated December 5, 2017.5 Under this, MoD had demarcated certain areas as restricted, the maps of which could only be prepared and used for sovereign purposes. The preparation and publication of maps of other areas were subject to security clearance from MoD and approval of SOI subject to their scale, attributes depicted, among other things.

  3. The MoF had issued multiple notifications restricting the export of maps of certain scales and formats.

  4. A highly controversial draft Geospatial Information Regulation Bill had been introduced in 2016, but eventually did not become a legislation.

The Guidelines recognize that some of these provisions have been rendered obsolete, given the technological advances in the sector basis which all earlier notifications, guidances, regulations, etc. issued by the DST, MoD or any other Government department which are contrary to the Guidelines expressly stand superseded.

CLASSIFICATIONS UNDER THE GUIDELINES

Classification of entities

The Guidelines classify entities which are engaged in the Processing of Geospatial Data into “Indian Entity(ies)” and others (“Restricted Entities”). An “Indian Entity” has been defined as “any Indian citizen, Government entities, Societies registered under applicable statutes, statutory bodies, Autonomous Institutions of the Government, or any Indian company or Indian LLP owned by resident Indian citizens or any Indian company or Indian LLP controlled by resident Indian citizens (as defined in the Explanation to Rule 23 of the Foreign Exchange Management (Non-Debt Instrument) Rules, 2019).

As a result, Restricted Entities include all other entities, including Indian companies which are foreign-owned and controlled. Notably, if a company is either Indian-owned or controlled, it will qualify as an Indian Entity.

Classification of Geospatial Data

The Guidelines classify Geospatial Data on the basis of certain threshold values as follows:

As detailed later, there are certain restrictions on Restricted Entities for processing Geospatial Data finer than these threshold values.

LIBERALISATION OF GEOSPATIAL DATA

RESTRICTIONS UNDER THE GUIDELINES

What precisely amounts to ‘passing through’ an entity or its servers is unclear. However, Restricted Entities may need to store/access the data for API integration, hence the said limitations may seem overly restrictive, especially when the Restricted Entities are limiting the use/storage of the data in India.

OTHER PROVISIONS

Interestingly, whether these Guidelines are binding from a strictly legal perspective is uncertain. This is because, from a review of the Guidelines and information available in the public domain, it appears that there is no specific act of Parliament or statutory provision which empowers the DST to issue these Guidelines. Nevertheless, there have been past instances wherein similar policies and guidelines have been issued by the Government without specific statutory backing but are implemented nonetheless, and also adhered to by the relevant stakeholders in the industry.

CONCLUSION

The Government’s intent of liberalizing the regime on geospatial data has been emphasized in various provisions of the Guidelines both expressly and implicitly. This is a huge step forward especially given the precedents in this space, such as the Draft Geospatial Information Regulation Bill of 2016 which was heavily criticized. However, from a practical implementation perspective, certain aspects of the Guidelines such as the definition of ‘mobile mapping surveys’, and licensing terms for Geospatial Data finer than the threshold values, require clarifications from the Government. This will help ensure that the process of liberalization does not get hampered due to interpretational issues. Exciting times lie ahead for various stakeholders in the Indian geospatial and maps space.


1 “Geospatial Data” has been defined as “Positional data with or without attribute data tagged, whether in the form of images, videos, vector, voxel and/or raster datasets or any other type of geospatial dataset in digitized or non-digitized form or web-services”; “Positional data” has been defined as “Latitude, longitude and elevation/depth of a point or its x, y & z co-ordinates in the territory of the Republic of India”; “Attribute data” has been defined as “Any data that when associated with Positional Data gives any additional meaning to it”.

2 “Map” has been defined as “Symbolic representation of real-world objects, regions or themes on a given scale which was generally published in paper form but now also available as web-map-service”.

3 Available at: https://www.surveyofindia.gov.in/documents/national-map-policy.pdf (Last visited on February 16, 2021).

4 Available at: https://www.surveyofindia.gov.in/documents/guidelines-for-implementing-national-map-policy.pdf (Last visited on February 16, 2021).

5 Available at: https://surveyofindia.gov.in/documents/news/document-56423-policy-1.pdf (Last visited on February 16, 2021).


Nishith Desai Associates 2025. All rights reserved.
National Law Review, Volume XI, Number 56