The International Archives of the Photogrammetry. Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Vol. XXXVII. Part B4. Beijing 2008
to convert such data into the environmental standard data has
been developed. These tools and data are provided free of
charge by the Tokyo Bay Environmental Information Center
described later. The flow of creation of environmental standard
data is shown in Figure 5.
Observation/Analysis
Environmental
Standard
Data
Observation Ocean
instruments Radar
■DepthShiftData
■TimeShiftData
■ LivingOrganismsData
Figure 5. Creation of Environmental Standard Data by XML
3. DEVELOPMENT OF “TOKYO BAY
ENVIRONMENTAL INFORMATION CENTER”
WEBSITE
TokyoBayEnvironmentallnformationCenter
Contents aimed at information disclosure
Contents aimed at information sharing
Figure 6. The Conceptual of the TBEIC
3.1 Overview of the Tokyo Bay Environmental
Information Center
The Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport commenced
operation of the “Tokyo Bay Environmental Information Center
(TBEIC)” website (URL: http://www.tbeic.go.jp) in June 2003,
as a spatial data infrastructure for sharing environmental data
regarding Tokyo Bay. Figure 6 shows a conceptual figure of the
Tokyo Bay Environmental Information Center (hereinafter
referred to as the center). In the center, the “contents aimed at
information disclosure” and “contents aimed at information
sharing” are being built up. The main contents are as shown
below.
“Contents aimed at information disclosure”
(1) Contents of accumulated environmental data regarding
Tokyo Bay retrievable by GIS.
(2) Environmental study contents aiming at improving
awareness of the environment and developing environmental
improvement activities.
(3) Contents that can be freely registered such as details of
environmental improvement events and photographs related to
the environment.
(4) Contents which can obtain, in real time, the observation
results of ocean radar continuously observing Tokyo Bay.
“Contents aimed at information sharing”
(1) Contents that retrieve and display the details and
whereabouts of environmental data controlled by the various
bodies, (clearinghouse)
(2) Contents that provide tools to create and utilize
environmental standard data and the standard specifications of
the environmental data recommended by the center.
The details of the clearinghouse that will be the foundation of
data sharing are described below.
3.2 Overview of the Clearinghouse
In order to promote the sharing of environmental data it is
important to have a mechanism where essential information can
be easily obtained. In many of the databases constructed thus
far for sharing environmental data, the data has been aggregated
and controlled in one database. However, the problems related
to constructing a database in such a way are listed below.
(1) The format of environmental data differs according to the
data management body.
(2) Rules are necessary to define rights and responsibilities
relating to environmental data.
(3) Vast amounts of labour are necessary for maintenance and
update of environmental data.
(4) Each body is providing their own environmental data.
Accordingly, in order to resolve these issues the Ministry of
Land, Infrastructure and Transport has created a clearinghouse
at the center, as shown in Figure 7, as a content which can
retrieve the location of the environmental data which the
various bodies possess.
The clearinghouse only possesses the metadata which explains
environmental data. In addition, environmental data is data
managed by each body that obtains it and provided to data users.
The volume of data is less in comparison with existing highly
concentrated databases due to this structure. Accordingly, the
burden of supervisors is reduced and it will be possible to
develop a system taking into account the intellectual property
rights of data creators. Furthermore, as the clearinghouse is