Geocoded national address data made openly available

By on 8 December, 2015

g-naf psma

A new agreement between the Australian Federal Government and PSMA Australia Limited (PSMA) will see the release of one of the most requested ubiquitous, high-value datasets to the economy, PSMA’s Geo-coded National Address File (G-NAF), including its Administrative Boundaries datasets.

Access to spatial data is becoming increasingly important given the rapid take-up and use of mobile devices in Australia and one of the most ubiquitous and powerful spatial datasets in a digital economy is a highly accurate geocoded national address file.

In line with the Federal Government’s innovation plans, making the G-NAF available under open data terms will remove barriers to greater use of the data and unlock and create opportunities for industry innovation and competitiveness. Expected beneficiaries span across industry, community organisations, research institutions and government agencies.

Geocoded address data can be used in almost any business or operation, including national, state and local infrastructure planning; business planning and analysis; logistics and service planning; emergency and disaster response; personal navigation and mapping; fraud prevention; address validation at the point of entry for business and government; and effective government service delivery and policy development.

The previous licencing arrangements for accessing the G-NAF were highly restrictive, preventing optimal collaboration and data sharing between existing users. This resulted in underutilisation of the data.

As an unlisted public company owned by the nine governments of Australia, PSMA receives location data from each of the jurisdictions and standardises, formats and aggregates the data into authoritative location based national datasets.

This initiative to make the G-NAF openly available has been achieved through collaboration between PSMA and the Commonwealth and State and Territory Governments. PSMA’s success in aggregating data from across the jurisdictions has resulted in the development of an incredibly important and world leading national geocoded address dataset, which to date has been made commercially available. PSMA has worked to transform its business model so its high-value data can be made available to the economy for use and reuse under open data terms.

The G-NAF and Administrative Boundaries datasets will be published under an open data licence at no cost to end users on data.gov.au in February 2016. The G-NAF will be provided as a Pipe Separated Value (psv) file and the Administrative Boundaries dataset will be provided as an ESRI Shapefile. Updated versions of these datasets will be published on a quarterly basis.

You may also like to read:


, ,


Newsletter

Sign up now to stay up to date about all the news from Spatial Source. You will get a newsletter every week with the latest news.

Q&A with Zaffar Sadiq Mohamed-Ghouse
Combatting climate change, saving lives and building better ...
Satellite imagery helps coastal data collection
A new study highlights the accuracy of satellite-derived bat...
Geospatial in School Awards recipients announced
Two outstanding teachers and a high school student have been...
The geospatial reality capture revolution
Aptella’s solutions are transforming spatial data and revo...
Evolution in survey: XGRIDS and Gaussian splats
Using 3DGS and SLAM technology, XGRIDS bridges the gap betwe...
Emlid joins Esri’s global Partner Network
The move will enable Esri ArcGIS users to take advantage of ...