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INTRODUCTION
In the last five years there has been increasing interest in information about
the coastal zone. The accident with the Exxon Valdez; the Green Plan,
published by the federal department of the Environment; the report of the
Committee on Land Use and the Rural Environment, released by the New
Brunswick Government in April, 1993, the development of aquaculture; and
the growing conflicts in the use of the marine environment; all point to the
increasing urgency felt by many levels of government to better equip
themselves to manage the coastal zone.
Departments at both the federal and provincial level undertake data
collection of land based data and water based data. This data is collected to
support the mandates in those departments to manage resources. Private
sector interests (oil industry, environmental consultants) also collect data, in
order to make good business decisions, or to meet government requirements.
Coastal data is a combination of water based data and land based data. There
is momentum growing at all levels to better coordinate this collection of
information, and to better exploit the potential of that already collected. The
management of this data is changing in response to financial, environmental,
and regulatory needs that did not exist 10 years ago. This paper will review
the main differences between water based and land based data, will discuss the
importance of standards to the proper exploitation of the value of the data
already collected, and will review several projects underway to improve
efficiencies in the collection of data and its management, focusing on recent
efforts in Atlantic Canada to cooperate better at the federal, provincial and
private sector levels in order to streamline the management of coastal data.
The Canadian Hydrographic Service Atlantic is the collector of bathymetric
information for the Atlantic Region. It is responsible for producing a range of
products in order to insure safe navigation in Atlantic waters. The New
Brunswick Geographic Information Corporation is a Crown Corporation
charged with, among other things, providing basic geographic information
for the province. The Land Information Management Service is a section of
the Department of Municipal Affairs in Nova Scotia. It is charged with a
range of objectives including the development and promotion of efficient
collection, use and management of geo-referenced information.
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN LAND BASED AND WATER BASED DATA
There are some fundamental differences between land and water based data.
It is important to understand these differences in order to appreciate the
challenges in trying to merge them in order to create a dataset suitable for
managing coastal information.
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