Meeting the Environmental Issues - A Challenge for Surveyors and Surveying AssociationsKarl-Friedrich THOENE, Germany
This article in .pdf-format (16 pages) 1) The paper summarises a keynote presentation given at the FIG Working Week in Rome, 8 May 2012. Key words: Global Megatrends, Land Governance, Surveying Profession, Environment, Surveying Associations SUMMARYA better public perception of the surveying profession requires a campaign to improve the general image of the profession and raise awareness of its fundamental contribution to key socio-political issues and global megatrends. Regarding environmental issues, such as energy provision, climatic changes, demography, bio-diversity, societal modernisation, disaster risk prevention and security policy, surveyors have to act as change managers. The global footprint of the surveying branch has to be pointed out through pro-active communication. This paper addresses the new professional orientation for surveyors in Germany and describes DVW´s integrative role as a platform and a stakeholder for the entire geo-community, shaping networks between politics, government, administration, private economy, industry, geo-business, science, research, education and other NGO´s. 1. INTRODUCTIONSurveyors are engineers with a technical and mathematical background.
It`s beyond doubt that we enjoy a good reputation by doing our job well
and precise. However, it`s also a fact that surveying is a service
discipline in a value-added chain. Thus, usually surveyors are not
identified with the final product – in contrast, for example, to a
civil-engineer and the bridge, he has constructed. Hence, we have to
improve our communication and promotion capabilities so as to allow for
a better public understanding of the essential role of surveyors. In
regards to our serious “young blood problem” and generally the lack of
engineers in Germany, which threatens to impact seriously on the
innovative power of our economy, DVW, in collaboration with our sister
organisations, has developed an image campaign for geodesy,
geo-information and land management and their protagonists. The main
goal consists simply of making engineering sciences, especially in the
field of surveying, again more attractive for young people, who –
following a trend over the last decade – have turned towards study of
courses with better income potential. Essentially - growing demand
cannot be met by the available alumni. 2. GLOBAL MEGATRENDS AND THE SURVEYING PROFESSIONThe key for a better understanding is to make the fundamental
contribution of the surveying profession for regional, national and
global development visible in regards to societal megatrends and the key
socio-political issues. The allegory of the two stone masons makes the
context clear: a traveller comes along and asks the first stone mason
what he is doing there. His answer: I hew stones. The second mason,
however, answers: I am working on a cathedral!
3. THE LAND QUESTION AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENTA surveyor`s affair? Yes, of course, because it`s really all about
land! Hernando de Soto`s credo to the importance of land is of timeless
relevance (de SOTO, 2000). The successful countries will be those that
spend their energies ensuring that property rights are widespread and
protected by law, rather than those which continue to focus only on
economic policy.
Tim Flannery, one of Australia`s leading thinkers and writers and an internationally acclaimed scientist and conservationist (FLANNERY, 2005/2008), gave us a clear message to take with us as well as a performance order in his great keynote speech at the FIG Congress in Sydney, 2010. The way he sees it, surveyors are custodians of an enabling technology that is critically important for the future. Surveyors should take a leading role in monitoring environmental processes – namely climate change and in explaining it to a broader public. Indeed, a pleading for pro-active communication of our strengths and potential.
The Bathurst Declaration of FIG and the UN, 1999, focussed on
the close connection between the land question and sustainable
development: No sustainable development without efficient land
administration and land management. This especially applies to facing
environmental issues.
The responsibility of surveyors can be described as the global footprint of our work, including:
4. SURVEYORS AND THE ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES - EXAMPLESComing back to the global challenges and their relationship with the
surveying branch, some practical examples, for relevant surveyor`s
activities concerning my professional background as the director-general
for land management and forestry in the Free-State of Thuringia, one of
the new German Laender (federal states), shall be presented proximately. Climate Change is in our backyard and adaption strategies are
at the top of the agenda of the land management authorities. An
interdisciplinary study group, established by the German Surveying
Association, DVW, has worked out the contribution of land consolidation
and land management for facing this challenge.
As a counter strategy the government of the Free-state of Thuringia
has developed a Land Budget Policy. The sustainable regeneration of
brownfields instead of the on-going consumption of worthy agrarian land
is part of this strategy and is perhaps relevant for all countries in
transition. What are we talking about?
Environmental protection and the preservation of biological diversity number among the key competences of rural land management. The figure below shows a remainder of the socialist industrialised agriculture: A slurry disposal for a 300,000 pig breeding facility, which originally was a lake. The area was decontaminated and reshaped as carp-breeding ponds and reserves for migratory birds through integrated land consolidation procedures.
The GREEN BELT of Thuringia, the former inner-German border, the iron curtain, is today a label for a really successful example of both, an integrative and sustainable environmental protection initiative and an example of good governance for regional development. The basic strategy was and is to generate regional development from a sound environmental state in a unique landscape as a value-added chain. The philosophy behind this is to do this with due respect to the historical aspects and to the interests of the local and regional players.
As a best practise example, a private property based land tenure system was successfully re-established after the German Reunification, a significant challenge after the socialist anti-property era.
The transition and designation of a private property system in Eastern Germany is a success story which brought the societal relevance of surveyors deeply into the minds of the people. No peace between neighbours, no investments without clarified and regulated property - that was and is the message! The task included to re-establish all three pillars of a fair,
private property based land tenure system: Land Administration,
Valuation and Land Management at its best. The solution to land use
conflicts between agriculture, nature, settlement and infrastructure
improvement, which occurred with the ”Infrastructure Projects German
Reunification”, i.e., newly constructed west-east transportation
arterias, became necessary.
Geo is inside of all! This underlines the relevance of geodetic engagement in the broad field of the modernisation of the society, taking navigation and positioning or policy making in the form of the EU INSPIRE directive as examples. 5. TOWARDS THE SIGNIFICANCE OF PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS – THE EXAMPLE OF THE GERMAN DVWTradition and Progress – from Pharaohs to Geoinformatics, the motto
of the FIG Working Week 2005 in Cairo - for a better understanding of
the system men-earth. Our deep historical roots stand for reliability
and constancy and are inherent to the ethical basis of the surveying
profession. Take a look at NASA´s Brief History of Geodesy - a wonderful
trailer on YouTube. Our roots have to coercively become part of a
communication and promotion strategy!
DVW sees itself as the home of the surveyors in Germany, promoting the sense of belonging together (corporate identity) and acting as a political lobbyist for surveyor`s interests. Professionally the DVW is arranged into 13 independent state associations, according to the statutes. 7 expert study groups deal with state-of-the-art surveying and land
management issues on both, a national and global level.
DVW is involved in international matters, primarily through FIG, on
meeting the global professional challenges and responsibilities and
increasingly through CLGE, the European Council of Geodetic Surveyors,
as about 80 % of the applicable law in Germany is EU-made and a strong
representation of interests in Brussels is regarded as useful.
Hence, we are successfully working on closer cooperation – based on a common formal declaration - between the various sister associations, namely:
The final goal is to establish a connected and networking
geo-associations community. The appointed range of action includes a
stronger representation of common professional interests and joint
activities in the fields of further education, recruiting new young
professionals, branding, a close coordination in the specialist work of
the association committees and the improvement of cross-industry
communication. A visible sign is a joint presentation stand of all
associated societies which, for the fourth consecutive year, will be in
the fair area at this year`s INTERGEO in Hannover, the so-called
“Geo-Associations Park”.
The message of the brand “Geodäsie”- initiative to our members, to
our clients and partners as well as to young people with good
mathematical and technical abilities is quite clear: Hand outs of presentation at FIG Working Week 2012 in Rome, Italy REFERENCESDe Soto, H, 2000. The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else. Basic Books, 2000. ISBN 0-465-01614-6. Flannery,T, 2005/2008, The Whether Makers. The Text Publishing Company, Melbourne. ISBN 9781 921351 822 (pbk). BIOGRAPHICAL NOTESPresident of the DVW – German Association for Geodesy, Geoinformation and Land Management. Director-General for the Development of Rural Spaces and Forestry, Thuringian Ministry for Agriculture, Nature Conservation and Environment in Erfurt, Thuringia, Germany. Doctorate (PhD) in Engineer Sciences (Dr.-Ing.) at the Technical University of Berlin. Honorary Professor at the Technical University of Dresden for International Land Policy and Land Management. Lecturer at the Technical University of Munich, International Master Course „Land Management and Land Tenure“. CONTACTSProf. Dr.-Ing. Karl-Friedrich Thoene |