Digital Agenda: Turning government data into gold

18.12.2011
The European Commission has launched an Open Data Strategy for Europe, which is expected to deliver a €40 billion boost to the EU's economy each year. Europe’s public administrations are sitting on a goldmine of unrealised economic potential: the large volumes of information collected by numerous public authorities and services. Member States such as the United Kingdom and France are already demonstrating this value.
The strategy to lift performance EU-wide is three-fold: firstly
the Commission will lead by example, opening its vaults
of information to the public for free through a new data
portal. Secondly, a level playing field for open data across the
EU will be established. Finally, these new measures are backed
by the €100 million which will be granted in 2011-2013
to fund research into improved data-handling
technologies.
These actions position the EU as the global leader in the re-use of
public sector information. They will boost the thriving industry
that turns raw data into the material that hundreds of millions
of ICT users depend on, for example smart phone apps, such as
maps, real-time traffic and weather information, price comparison
tools and more. Other leading beneficiaries will include
journalists and academics.
Commission Vice President Neelie Kroes said: "We are sending a
strong signal to administrations today. Your data is worth more if
you give it away. So start releasing it now: use this framework to
join the other smart leaders who are already gaining from embracing
open data. Taxpayers have already paid for this information, the
least we can do is give it back to those who want to use it in new
ways that help people and create jobs and growth."
The Commission proposes to update the 2003 Directive on the
re-use of public sector information by:
- Making it a general rule that all documents made accessible by
public sector bodies can be re-used for any purpose,
commercial or non-commercial, unless protected by third party
copyright.
- Establishing the principle that public bodies should not be
allowed to charge more than costs triggered by the individual
request for data (marginal costs); in practice this means most
data will be offered for free or virtually for free, unless
duly justified.
- Making it compulsory to provide data in commonly-used,
machine-readable formats to ensure data can be effectively
re-used.
- Introducing regulatory oversight to enforce these
principles.
- Massively expanding the reach of the Directive to include
libraries, museums and archives for the first time; the
existing 2003 rules will apply to data from such
institutions.
In addition, the Commission will make its own data public
through a new "data portal", for which the Commission has
already agreed the contract. This portal is currently in
‘beta version’ (development and testing phase) with
an expected launch in spring 2012. In time this will serve
as a single-access point for re-usable data from all EU
institutions, bodies and agencies and national authorities.
European Commission; Photo: Flickr/okfn, www.flickr.com












