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    | Article of the Month - 
	  September 2012 |  Meeting the Environmental Issues - A Challenge for
		Surveyors and Surveying AssociationsKarl-Friedrich THOENE, Germany
		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.Predominantly, this article is concerned with specific German 
		experiences pertaining to how to shape environmental and societal change 
		through surveying activities and how to support those processes through 
		a strong professional association. Further, it is assumed that many 
		countries face similar challenges. In this respect the presented 
		approach may give helpful suggestions for applicable solutions.
 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!Let’s face the main challenges of Global Change and the function of 
		surveyors with the ideology of the second mason, as Change Managers. 
		Without laying claim to completeness, those main challenges are:
 
			- Energy - Climate Changes/Global Warming
 - Demography
 - Environment
 - Land Tenure System
 - Modernisation of the Society
 - Global Financial Crisis (banks and states)
 - Disaster Risk Management
 - Security (in every respect)
 
 
  Figure 1. Global megatrends and the role of the surveying 
			profession
 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.The global financial crisis has proved his theory painfully and 
		underlines at least the role of engineers for progress and qualitative 
		growth – for real products and values instead of bubbles - of financial 
		behaviour without measure, values or morality. Thus we have to make 
		clear that engineering disciplines, especially in the field of 
		surveying, are characterised by a solid professional-ethical basis. 
		Accordingly, issues and virtues like sustainability and reliability are 
		important to us as a code of conduct. We generate real and lasting 
		values in terms of solutions.
 
 
		 Figure 2. Tim Flannery, FIG Congress Sydney 2010
 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. 
		 Figure 3. Bathurst Declaration
 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.
 Willi Zimmermann, a well respected German consultant, emphasized 
		in his remarkable INTERGEO Karlsruhe, 2009, keynote the necessity of a 
		new Global Governance. Given current estimates of the world population 
		are at 6.8 billion and are likely to exceed 9 billion by 2035, the fight 
		for food, for the preservation of the natural resources of planet earth, 
		the fight against political and economic misuse of power and against the 
		lack of governance in fragile states as well as the fight for justice 
		and against poverty, are paramount. He demands a Global Governance in 
		the meaning of a broadened understanding of “Global Public Goods” 
		including global spatial information about the actual state and 
		development of global resources.
 
 
		 Figure 4. The Global Footprint of the Surveying Profession
 The responsibility of surveyors can be described as the global 
		footprint of our work, including: 
			- land governance, land administration and land management as key 
			competences,- establishment of a Spatial Data Infrastructure (SDI),
 - based on geodetic reference systems,
 - accompanied by professional education, research systems and 
			institutions and
 - supported by professional associations and networks such as FIG on 
			a global level as well as national associations.
 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.
 After the Fukushima disaster the German Government decided to phase-out 
		nuclear power and replace it with renewable energies – wood, water, 
		wind, solar, agricultural bio-gas etc. The radical change of the 
		Energy Policy results in enormous impacts on land use and property. 
		Land management is required for the provision of land for the requisite 
		facilities, for new transmission lines and for ecological compensation 
		as well as for the reorganisation of land ownership and land use, 
		including a participative approach in a close dialogue with the actors 
		on site.
 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.
 The Demographic Change in Germany (migration, “brain drain”, low 
		birth rate, less people which are growing older) – summarised in drastic 
		words: at first people don`t want to have children and finally they 
		don`t want to die - has amongst other serious outcomes a negative 
		side-effect, namely, that a decreasing population consumes more and more 
		land for settlement and transportation purposes. The red line in the 
		figure below shows the increasing land consumption over the years and at 
		the same time the blue line documents a meanwhile decreasing population. 
		The scissor is opening more and more.
 
  Figure 5. Decreasing population and increasing land consumption
 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?
 On the one hand eye-sores in our villages, heritage of the socialist era 
		and synonym for depression, on the other hand worthy agrarian land is 
		consumed for residential, infrastructural or commercial purposes. 
		Opencast mining areas in a large scale are under redevelopment. Half of 
		the nuclear arsenal of the former Soviet army was assembled with uranium 
		from the below documented mining area in Saxony and Thuringia. A 
		destroyed and contaminated landscape resulted. 20 years later, after a 5 
		billion Euro environmental rehabilitation programme, accompanied by 
		sound land reorganisation procedures, flourishing landscapes result. The 
		development of the village center with the help of the village renewal 
		programme prevents land consumption in the free landscape.
 
			
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				 Figure 6. Eye-sore in a village
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				 Figure 7. New residential areas
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				 Figure 8. Mining areas under rehabilitation
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				 Figure 9. Village Renewal
 |  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. 
			
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				 Figure 10. Slurry disposal
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				 Figure 11. Ecological land consolidation
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				 Figure 12. The Green Belt
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				 Figure 13. Event Management
 |  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.  
		 Figure 14. New planning philosophy
 A lesson learnt is that surveyors definitely have to improve their 
		planning competences. A new planning philosophy is based on the success 
		of spatial development projects – land management in a broad and 
		integrated approach, including moderation, secured financing, 
		performance-orientation, project management, citizen`s participation 
		and, importantly, publicity and communication. Coming back to my 
		introduction: Do well and talk!
 As part of the Green Belt Land Management Project we have organised a 
		mega event with the builders of the German Unity, Mikhail Gorbatchev, 
		George Bush Sen. and the former German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, at Point 
		Alpha, in times of the cold war one of the most dangerous points of the 
		world because all NATO and Warsaw Pact war sceneries were concentrated 
		on this gap, with high troop concentrations on both sides of the border. 
		The heraldic animals of all three nations are eagles and a falconer let 
		them fly over the crowd and they landed on the arms of the three 
		statesmen - a magic moment as well as an effective promotion for the 
		land management project itself.
 
		 Figure 15. New Land Tenure System for Eastern Germany
 
 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.  
		 Figure 16. Land Tenure System - the three columns
 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.
 
		 Figure 17. Geo and modern state
 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 was established in 1871 as a professional institution and was one of 
		the founders of FIG. Thus, 140 years of experience in successful 
		professional policy is part of our branding and confidence marketing. A 
		long tradition symbolizes stability, continuity, reliability and 
		sustainability as a main feature of our engineering profession. In my 
		view tradition is much more than a nostalgic view back to the past. It 
		draws on a strong internal and outward appearance of a professional 
		association.
 
  Figure 18. Tradition and Progress
 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. We have published the Journal for Geodesy, Geo-Information and Land 
		Management (zfv) since 1873, one of the oldest technical-scientific 
		periodicals.
 
 
		 Figure 19. Organisation of DVW
 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. 
 DVW acts as the organizer of the INTERGEO, which has emerged to become 
		the world’s largest event and communication platform in the developing 
		field of surveying from a multi-disciplinary perspective. Thus, 
		INTERGEO, which stands under the permanent patronage of the Federal 
		Minister of the Interior, is the top brand of DVW and the surveying 
		community. There is indeed no better forum for communication, promotion, 
		discussion and transportation of our professional interests to our 
		partners in policy, economy, government, administration, geo-business, 
		science, education and research than INTERGEO.
 
 
		 Figure 20. INTERGEO Trade Fair and Congress
 Hence, we are successfully working on closer cooperation – based on a 
		common formal declaration - between the various sister associations, 
		namely:  
			• the Society for Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and 
			Geoinformation (DGPFG),• the Cartographic Society (DGfK),
 • the Hydrographic Society (DHygG),
 • the Association of German Surveyors (VDV),
 • the Society of Mining Surveyors (DMV),
 • the Federation of Publically Appointed Surveyors (BDVI),
 • the Society for Positioning and Navigation (DGON) and
 • the Umbrella Organisation for Geoinformation (DDGI).
 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”. 
 So the unique benefits of a strong national surveying society with a 
		stabile financial basis, a functioning internal organization and good 
		networks to partner organizations, policy and media are quite evident. 
		This will be achieved through professional lobbying and the capacity for 
		long-term strategic initiatives – like the Brand “Geodäsie” as a 
		corporate identity and label of confidence marketing for all surveying 
		activities in Germany (the German expression “Geodäsie” is not 
		comparable to the English “geodesy”, moreover, it includes the whole 
		range of surveying activities as an umbrella term).
 
 In order to promote our profession`s key societal role and to raise 
		political awareness we have developed a strategy as an integrated part 
		of the Brand “Geodäsie” – an initiative for recruiting qualified young 
		people to our profession, 
		www.arbeitsplatz-erde.de (an English version is available) as an 
		appropriate reaction to a dramatic lack of new recruits for engineering 
		sciences in general, on the one hand, and excellent professional 
		perspectives for Geodesy, Geo-information and Land Management on the 
		other hand.
 
 
		 Figure 21. The new recruits Internet platform “workplace earth”
 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:
 We are surveyors and we are engineers,
 • vested with good virtues,
 • of high societal benefit and
 • provided with scientific and practical know-how.
 We offer answers to the future questions of planet earth and mankind!
 We want higher acceptance and a better perception of our work and our 
		profession.
 We need a better internal outcome for our profession!
 We need more young blood and we offer great job perspectives.
 
 We are proud to be surveyors!
 
 
		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 Thoenec/o Thuringian Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, Environment and Nature 
		Conservation
 Hallesche Straße 16
 99085 Erfurt
 GERMANY
 Email: 
		karl-friedrich.thoene@dvw.de
 
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