

04 May 2009, 4:01pm
Saturday, 25 April 2009 - European governments are could be recovering an additional 300 million Euro per annum in taxation revenues if they allowed a free commercial meteorological value added sector to operate
Dr Richard Pettifer, the General Secretary of PRIMET, argues in a recent paper presented to the EC 7th eeeGov Days conference in Prague argues that among all of the possible sources of Public Sector Information (PSI) that can be exploited commercally, meteorological data is one of those potentially most easily accessed, understood and used. All operational meteorological data are exchanged in one or other of a range of internationally agreed and understood formats and almost all of it has a full complement of metadata associated with it. It should be among the easiest of all PSI to exploit for the greater good of the economy as a whole. On the other hand, successful exploitation depends, in many cases, upon access, in near real time, to data sets that span national borders.
Some attempts have been made to deal with these characteristics and to set up arrangements that enable data from most European countries to be made available for commercial exploitation. However, the facts that in each nation there is only one source of supply for the data (the National Meteorological Service, NMHS) and that in many countries these same Services derive some of their core funding from exploiting the same data in the commercial market place, create a distortion in the trading circumstances that restricts the competitive development of the market through wholesale pricing, internal cross subsidisation and restrictions on data supply and its use.
As a result, Europe is annually losing 100’s of millions of Euro in net taxation revenues and seeing virtually no significant net growth in the value added end user market in weather products.
This paper examines some of these issues and identifies some of the problems in greater detail.

Adopting Cloud computing can save money, but good governance is essential to manage the risk argues Mike Small
Saturday,, 25, April, 2009, -, European, governments, are, could, be, recovering, an, additional, 300, million, Euro, per, annum, in, taxation, revenues, if, they, allowed, a, free, commercial, meteorological, value, added, sector, to, operate
Dr, Richard, Pettifer,, the, General, Secretary, of, PRIMET,More…
Mike Small
Member of the London Chapter of ISACA, the Information Systems Audit & Control Association (www.isaca.org)