SIST EN ISO 19152-3:2024
(Main)Geographic information - Land Administration Domain Model (LADM) - Part 3: Marine georegulation (ISO 19152-3:2024)
Geographic information - Land Administration Domain Model (LADM) - Part 3: Marine georegulation (ISO 19152-3:2024)
This document specifies the concepts and structure for standardization for georegulation in the marine space.
This document addresses the information structures related to management of legal spaces (such as the international maritime limits and boundaries, marine living and non-living resources management areas, marine conservation areas, etc.) and their related rights and obligations.
This document establishes the common elements and basic schema to structure marine georegulation information system. It builds upon the common components defined in ISO 19152-1.
Land Administration Domain Model (LADM) - Teil 3: Georegulierung des Meeres (ISO 19152-3:2024)
Information géographique - Modèle du domaine de l'administration des terres (LADM) - Partie 3: Géoréglementation marine (ISO 19152-3:2024)
Le présent document spécifie les concepts et la structure de normalisation pour la géoréglementation dans l'espace marin.
Le présent document traite des structures d'information liées à la gestion des espaces juridiques, telles que les limites et frontières maritimes internationales, les zones de gestion des ressources marines vivantes et non vivantes, les zones de conservation marine, etc., ainsi que les droits et obligations associés.
Le présent document établit les éléments communs et le schéma de base pour structurer le système d'information de la géoréglementation marine. Il s'appuie sur les composants communs définis dans l'ISO 19152-1.
Geografske informacije - Model domene za zemljiško administracijo (LADM) - 3. del: Georegulacija morja (ISO 19152-3:2024)
Ta del standarda ISO 19152 zagotavlja koncepte in strukturo standardizacije za georegulacijo morja.
Ta standard obravnava informacijske strukture, povezane z upravljanjem pravnih prostorov, kot so mednarodne pomorske omejitve in meje, območja upravljanja živih in neživih morskih virov, morska varstvena območja itd., ter z njimi povezane pravice in obveznosti.
Ta del standarda ISO 19152 določa skupne elemente in osnovno shemo za strukturo informacijskega sistema za georegulacijo morja. Temelji na skupnih komponentah, opredeljenih v standardu ISO 19152, 1. del – Osnove.
General Information
Relations
Standards Content (Sample)
SLOVENSKI STANDARD
01-oktober-2024
Nadomešča:
SIST EN ISO 19152:2013
Geografske informacije - Model domene za zemljiško administracijo (LADM) - 3.
del: Georegulacija morja (ISO 19152-3:2024)
Geographic information - Land Administration Domain Model (LADM) - Part 3: Marine
georegulation (ISO 19152-3:2024)
Land Administration Domain Model (LADM) - Teil 3: Georegulierung des Meeres (ISO
19152-3:2024)
Information géographique - Modèle du domaine de l'administration des terres (LADM) -
Partie 3: Géoréglementation marine (ISO 19152-3:2024)
Ta slovenski standard je istoveten z: EN ISO 19152-3:2024
ICS:
07.040 Astronomija. Geodezija. Astronomy. Geodesy.
Geografija Geography
35.240.70 Uporabniške rešitve IT v IT applications in science
znanosti
2003-01.Slovenski inštitut za standardizacijo. Razmnoževanje celote ali delov tega standarda ni dovoljeno.
EN ISO 19152-3
EUROPEAN STANDARD
NORME EUROPÉENNE
July 2024
EUROPÄISCHE NORM
ICS 35.240.70 Supersedes EN ISO 19152:2012
English Version
Geographic information - Land Administration Domain
Model (LADM) - Part 3: Marine georegulation (ISO 19152-
3:2024)
Information géographique - Modèle du domaine de Land Administration Domain Model (LADM) - Teil 3:
l'administration des terres (LADM) - Partie 3: Georegulierung des Meeres (ISO 19152-3:2024)
Géoréglementation marine (ISO 19152-3:2024)
This European Standard was approved by CEN on 22 May 2024.
CEN members are bound to comply with the CEN/CENELEC Internal Regulations which stipulate the conditions for giving this
European Standard the status of a national standard without any alteration. Up-to-date lists and bibliographical references
concerning such national standards may be obtained on application to the CEN-CENELEC Management Centre or to any CEN
member.
This European Standard exists in three official versions (English, French, German). A version in any other language made by
translation under the responsibility of a CEN member into its own language and notified to the CEN-CENELEC Management
Centre has the same status as the official versions.
CEN members are the national standards bodies of Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia,
Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway,
Poland, Portugal, Republic of North Macedonia, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Türkiye and
United Kingdom.
EUROPEAN COMMITTEE FOR STANDARDIZATION
COMITÉ EUROPÉEN DE NORMALISATION
EUROPÄISCHES KOMITEE FÜR NORMUNG
CEN-CENELEC Management Centre: Rue de la Science 23, B-1040 Brussels
© 2024 CEN All rights of exploitation in any form and by any means reserved Ref. No. EN ISO 19152-3:2024 E
worldwide for CEN national Members.
Contents Page
European foreword . 3
European foreword
This document (EN ISO 19152-3:2024) has been prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC 211
"Geographic information/Geomatics" in collaboration with Technical Committee CEN/TC 287
“Geographic Information” the secretariat of which is held by BSI.
This European Standard shall be given the status of a national standard, either by publication of an
identical text or by endorsement, at the latest by January 2025, and conflicting national standards shall
be withdrawn at the latest by January 2025.
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of
patent rights. CEN shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights.
This document supersedes EN ISO 19152:2012.
Any feedback and questions on this document should be directed to the users’ national standards
body/national committee. A complete listing of these bodies can be found on the CEN website.
According to the CEN-CENELEC Internal Regulations, the national standards organizations of the
following countries are bound to implement this European Standard: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria,
Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland,
Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Republic of
North Macedonia, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Türkiye and the
United Kingdom.
Endorsement notice
The text of ISO 19152-3:2024 has been approved by CEN as EN ISO 19152-3:2024 without any
modification.
International
Standard
ISO 19152-3
First edition
Geographic information — Land
2024-07
Administration Domain Model
(LADM) —
Part 3:
Marine georegulation
Information géographique — Modèle du domaine de
l'administration des terres (LADM) —
Partie 3: Géoréglementation marine
Reference number
ISO 19152-3:2024(en) © ISO 2024
ISO 19152-3:2024(en)
© ISO 2024
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, or required in the context of its implementation, no part of this publication may
be reproduced or utilized otherwise in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, or posting on
the internet or an intranet, without prior written permission. Permission can be requested from either ISO at the address below
or ISO’s member body in the country of the requester.
ISO copyright office
CP 401 • Ch. de Blandonnet 8
CH-1214 Vernier, Geneva
Phone: +41 22 749 01 11
Email: copyright@iso.org
Website: www.iso.org
Published in Switzerland
ii
ISO 19152-3:2024(en)
Contents Page
Foreword .vi
Introduction .vii
1 Scope . 1
2 Normative references . 1
3 Terms, definitions and abbreviated terms . 1
3.1 Terms and definitions .1
3.2 Abbreviated terms .2
4 Conformance . 3
4.1 Conformance requirements and testing .3
4.2 Conformance classes .3
4.3 Conformance class 1 — Marine limits and boundaries in support of the UNCLOS .4
4.4 Conformance class 2 — General marine georegulation .4
5 Notation . 4
6 Context . 5
7 Feature and attribute structure . 6
7.1 Structural overview .6
7.2 Geometry structure .6
7.3 Packages of ISO 19152-3 (this document) .7
8 Marine georegulation application schema . 8
8.1 Marine georegulation elements .8
8.2 Inherited core packages .10
8.3 MRN .10
8.4 Party section .11
8.4.1 Party section general .11
8.4.2 MG_Party . 12
8.4.3 MG_Party attributes and relationships . 13
8.4.4 MG_PartyMember . . 13
8.4.5 MG_PartyMember attributes and relationships .14
8.4.6 MG_PartyTypeList .14
8.4.7 MG_GroupPartyTypeList .14
8.4.8 Special data types.14
8.5 Administrative section . . 15
8.5.1 Administrative section general . 15
8.5.2 MG_BAUnit .17
8.5.3 MG_BAUnit attributes and relationships .17
8.5.4 MG_BAUnitTypeList .18
8.5.5 MG_RRR .18
8.5.6 MG_RRR attributes and relationships .19
8.5.7 MG_Right .19
8.5.8 MG_Right attributes and relationships .19
8.5.9 MG_Responsibility . 20
8.5.10 MG_Responsibility attributes and relationships . 20
8.5.11 MG_Restriction . 20
8.5.12 MG_Restriction attributes and relationships . 20
8.5.13 MG_Governance . 20
8.5.14 MG_Governance attributes and relationships .21
8.6 Party to administrative section .21
8.7 Party to administrative relationships . 22
8.7.1 rrrParty relationship . 22
8.7.2 baunitAsParty relationship . 22
8.8 Spatial unit section . 22
8.8.1 General . 22
iii
ISO 19152-3:2024(en)
8.8.2 MG_FeatureUnit .24
8.8.3 MG_FeatureUnit attributes and relationships .24
8.8.4 MG_SpatialAttribute . 25
8.8.5 MG_SpatialAttribute attributes and relationships . 25
8.8.6 MG_AdditionalSpatialInformation . 26
8.8.7 MG_AdditionalSpatialInformation attributes and relationships . 26
8.8.8 MG_Location . 29
8.8.9 MG_Location attributes and relationships . 29
8.8.10 MG_Point . 30
8.8.11 MG_Point attributes and relationships . 30
8.8.12 MG_PointAttributes . 30
8.8.13 MG_PointAttributes attributes and relationships . 30
8.8.14 locationReference dataType .31
8.8.15 MG_PointAttributes attributes .31
8.8.16 MG_LocationTypeList .31
8.8.17 MG_PointTypeList .31
8.8.18 MG_ InterpolationTypeList .32
8.8.19 MG_Limit Spatial Unit Class .32
8.8.20 MG_Limit.32
8.8.21 MG_Limit attributes and relationships .32
8.8.22 MG_Curve . 33
8.8.23 MG_Curve attributes and constraints . 33
8.8.24 MG_Curve_Attributes . 33
8.8.25 MG_Curve_Attributes attributes and constraints . 34
8.8.26 MG_ArcGeometryTypeList . 34
8.8.27 MG_LimitTypeList . 34
8.8.28 MG_Zone Spatial Unit Class . 34
8.8.29 MG_Zone . . 35
8.8.30 MG_Zone attributes and relationships . . 35
8.8.31 MG_Surface . 36
8.8.32 MG_Surface attributes . 36
8.8.33 MG_Surface_Attributes . . 36
8.8.34 MG_ZoneTypeList .37
8.8.35 MG_JurisdictionDomainTypeList .37
8.8.36 LA_SurfaceRelationType .37
8.8.37 LA_AreaType . .37
8.8.38 LA_AreaValue .37
8.8.39 MG_Space spatial unit class .37
8.8.40 MG_Space . 38
8.8.41 MG_Space attributes and relationships . 38
8.8.42 MG_Volume . 39
8.8.43 MG_Volume_Attributes attributes . 39
8.8.44 MG_SpaceTypeList . 40
8.8.45 LA_VolumeValue . 40
8.9 Source section . 40
8.9.1 Source section general . 40
8.9.2 MG_Source.41
8.9.3 MG_Source attributes and relationships.42
8.9.4 LA_AvailabilityStatusType . 44
8.9.5 ExtArchive . 44
8.9.6 CI_OnlineResource . 44
8.9.7 QualityElement . 44
8.10 Versioning . 44
8.10.1 General approach to versioning . 44
8.10.2 Versioned object .45
Annex A (normative) Abstract test suite .46
Annex B (normative) Marine contexts . 47
iv
ISO 19152-3:2024(en)
Bibliography .53
v
ISO 19152-3:2024(en)
Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) is a worldwide federation of national standards
bodies (ISO member bodies). The work of preparing International Standards is normally carried out through
ISO technical committees. Each member body interested in a subject for which a technical committee
has been established has the right to be represented on that committee. International organizations,
governmental and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO, also take part in the work. ISO collaborates closely
with the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) on all matters of electrotechnical standardization.
The procedures used to develop this document and those intended for its further maintenance are described
in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 1. In particular, the different approval criteria needed for the different types
of ISO document should be noted. This document was drafted in accordance with the editorial rules of the
ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2 (see www.iso.org/directives).
ISO draws attention to the possibility that the implementation of this document may involve the use of (a)
patent(s). ISO takes no position concerning the evidence, validity or applicability of any claimed patent
rights in respect thereof. As of the date of publication of this document, ISO had not received notice of (a)
patent(s) which may be required to implement this document. However, implementers are cautioned that
this may not represent the latest information, which may be obtained from the patent database available at
www.iso.org/patents. ISO shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights.
Any trade name used in this document is information given for the convenience of users and does not
constitute an endorsement.
For an explanation of the voluntary nature of standards, the meaning of ISO specific terms and expressions
related to conformity assessment, as well as information about ISO's adherence to the World Trade
Organization (WTO) principles in the Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT), see www.iso.org/iso/foreword.html.
This document was prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC 211, Geographic information/Geomatics, in
collaboration with the European Committee for Standardization (CEN) Technical Committee CEN/TC 287,
Geographic Information, in accordance with the Agreement on technical cooperation between ISO and CEN
(Vienna Agreement), and in collaboration with the International Hydrographic Organization (IHO).
This edition of ISO 19152-3, together with all other parts in the ISO 19152 series, cancels and replaces the
first edition (ISO 19152:2012), which has been technically revised. This document is a new part to the
ISO 19152 series and makes no changes to the original ISO 19152:2007.
A list of all parts in the ISO 19152 series can be found on the ISO website.
Any feedback or questions on this document should be directed to the user’s national standards body. A
complete listing of these bodies can be found at www.iso.org/members.html.
vi
ISO 19152-3:2024(en)
Introduction
ISO 19152:2012 specifically addressed the land registration aspects of land administration. This document
(ISO 19152-3:2023) introduces the broader term "georegulation", which addresses any area of geographic
information in which rights, restrictions or responsibilities (RRR) can be applied. Georegulation is the
activity of delimiting and asserting control over geographical spaces through regulations. This document
allows the objects of georegulation to be documented in a systematic and consistent manner. Although
the broader term "georegulation" is used throughout the document, the main element of the title of the
document remains “Land Administration Domain Model” to retain compatibility with the previous edition
of the document.
This document addresses georegulation in the marine environment. Rights and obligations created by
georegulation share a basic structure, as described in ISO 19152-1. Marine activity, including transportation,
resource extraction and food production (fishing and marine aquaculture), is of great importance. Different
rights and obligations can exist on the surface, in the water column and on the seabed. The model defined
in this document can be used for marine cadastres as well as other use cases (such as conservation areas,
living resources and fishery management areas, non-living resources management areas, seabed tenure,
[27]
etc.), and to describe data in support of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) or
other conventions, e.g. administrative areas described in support of safe navigation under the International
[28]
Convention for the Safety of Life At Sea (SOLAS).
The oceans are of importance to all humankind, and specific areas along coastlines are under the jurisdiction
of nation states. The jurisdiction of coastal states extends to certain maritime zones. Users and states have
rights, restrictions and responsibilities in specific zones. The area beyond coastal states’ zones is without
[27]
exercise or claim of sovereignty and the rights regarding the resources are vested in mankind. In
specific cases there are private rights, such as the rights associated with fishing or resource extraction.
Some individuals can have property rights on land adjacent to water potentially extending into the area
covered by water. This can be described in a marine cadastre, described using the structures available in
this document.
International marine rights are addressed in international treaties globally through UN conventions and
[27]
between nations; in particular, the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). Marine
safety and navigation are addressed by the International Maritime Organization (IMO) international
[28]
convention on Safety Of Life At Sea (SOLAS) 1974. Other international conventions, treaties and national
laws establish rights and obligations.
The International Hydrographic Organization is an international standards development organization that
specializes in the marine space. It develops standards for safe navigation, marine jurisdictions, oceanography
and other aspects of the marine space in close cooperation with other international organizations such as
[29] [27]
the UN DOALOS and ISO. In particular it supports several UN conventions such as the UNCLOS and the
[28] [30]
SOLAS conventions in cooperation with the UN IMO. Alignment between ISO International Standards
for the marine space and the IHO is important.
United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal 14C and United Nations’ General Assembly Resolution
A/RES/59/24 directed the IHO to provide technical standards for maritime zones. The IHO supports
standards development for oceanography, marine science and the UN SOLAS and the UNCLOS conventions.
[31] [18]
In particular, as part of the S-100 Universal Hydrographic Data Model, IHO has developed a series of
[32] [20]
standards and specifications that address the marine space. These include IHO S-121 on maritime
[33]
limits and boundaries and IHO S-122 on marine protected areas.
A characteristic of georegulation objects in the marine space is that their geometry structure can need
[18]
to be aligned with IHO S-100 and ISO 19107. As such, there can be different “feature” types. This is in
alignment with the way "feature" is defined in the general feature model from ISO 19109 and the approach
to feature cataloguing defined in ISO 19110. For their geographic information aspects, the IHO suite of
hydrographic standards is based on many of the ISO/TC 211 suite of Geographic Information documents,
[20] [27]
through S-100. S-121 on maritime limits and boundaries directly supports the UNCLOS and is built
[20]
upon the ISO 19152 series. Due to the close links between S-121 and the ISO 19152 series, this document
makes direct reference to S-100 and S-121.
vii
ISO 19152-3:2024(en)
Since many of the rights and restrictions in the marine space come either from international or bi-national
treaties, or national proclamations or laws, within the context of georegulation, it can be necessary to express
the text or preamble of a treaty or law. A “governance” object has therefore been added to the administrative
structure in this document to allow legal text to be associated with an administrative unit. In many cases
the parties involved in rights, restrictions and responsibilities (RRR) relationships in the marine space are
nations. This means that the code lists of types of parties and administrative units defined in other parts of
the ISO 19152 series will not necessarily apply. Unique code lists have been defined to address the marine
space. Further, treaties are often the reference source for both the administrative and spatial aspects, so the
distinction between types of sources has been eliminated.
The ISO 19152 series is a general abstract model for Land Administrative Domain Model (LADM) systems. It
provides a uniform way of describing national or other systems. The ISO 19152 series is implemented through
[20]
profiles, such as country profiles, in accordance with ISO 19106. S-121 is a profile for the description
[28] [27]
of marine limits and boundaries (MLB) in the context of support for the SOLAS and the UNCLOS
conventions supported by the IHO series of standards. This document has two conformance classes, one
that directly supports the S-121 profile, and the other more general conformance class that supports other
aspects of marine georegulation. The profile for MLB is defined in S-121. The support of other aspects of
marine georegulation will require the development of specific profiles to address these other areas.
[20]
This document is a derived work, developed under a cooperative agreement with the IHO, based on S-121
and used with permission.
In accordance with the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2, 2018, Rules for the structure and drafting of International
Standards, in International Standards the decimal sign is a comma on the line. However, the General
Conference on Weights and Measures (Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesures) at its meeting in 2003
passed unanimously the following resolution:
“The decimal marker shall be either a point on the line or a comma on the line.”
In practice, the choice between these alternatives depends on customary use in the language concerned. In
the technical areas of geodesy and geographic information it is customary for the decimal point always to be
used, for all languages. That practice is used throughout this document.
NOTE The direction of positive rotation used in this document is positive in a counter clockwise direction in
alignment with ISO 19109 and ISO 19107. The IHO S-100 series of standards makes use of “Heading Orientation” which
is positive in a clockwise direction. The user needs to be aware of this difference.
viii
International Standard ISO 19152-3:2024(en)
Geographic information — Land Administration Domain
Model (LADM) —
Part 3:
Marine georegulation
1 Scope
This document specifies the concepts and structure for standardization for georegulation in the marine space.
This document addresses the information structures related to management of legal spaces (such as the
international maritime limits and boundaries, marine living and non-living resources management areas,
marine conservation areas, etc.) and their related rights and obligations.
This document establishes the common elements and basic schema to structure marine georegulation
information system. It builds upon the common components defined in ISO 19152-1.
2 Normative references
The following documents are referred to in the text in such a way that some or all of their content constitutes
requirements of this document. For dated references, only the edition cited applies. For undated references,
the latest edition of the referenced document (including any amendments) applies.
ISO 19152-1, Geographic information — Land Administration Domain Model (LADM) — Part 1: Generic
conceptual model
3 Terms, definitions and abbreviated terms
3.1 Terms and definitions
For the purposes of this document, the terms and definitions given in ISO 19152-1 and the following apply.
ISO and IEC maintain terminology databases for use in standardization at the following addresses:
— ISO Online browsing platform: available at https:// www .iso .org/ obp
— IEC Electropedia: available at https:// www .electropedia .org/
3.1.1
boundary
delimitation between two or more zones
Note 1 to entry: A boundary involves two or more parties.
Note 2 to entry: Adapted from Reference [20].
ISO 19152-3:2024(en)
3.1.2
curve
1-dimensional geometric primitive, representing the continuous image of a line
Note 1 to entry: The boundary of a curve is the set of points at either end of the curve. If the curve is a cycle, the two
ends are identical, and the curve (if topologically closed) is considered to not have a boundary. The first point is called
the start point, and the last is the end point. Connectivity of the curve is guaranteed by the "continuous image of a line"
clause. A topological theorem states that a continuous image of a connected set is connected.
[SOURCE: ISO 19136-1:2020, 3.1.17]
3.1.3
limit
curve that defines a boundary or extent of a zone
Note 1 to entry: A limit involves one party.
Note 2 to entry: Adapted from Reference [20].
3.1.4
marine
relating to navigation or shipping or relating to or connected with the sea or used, or adopted for use at sea
Note 1 to entry: Sometimes called "maritime", but maritime is more frequently applied to that which borders on the sea.
[SOURCE: Reference [22]]
3.1.5
marine cadastre
management tool which spatially describes, visualizes and realizes formally and informally defined
boundaries and associated rights, restrictions and responsibilities in the marine environment
Note 1 to entry: In addition to boundaries, a marine cadastre can also address locations, limits, baselines, zones and spaces.
Note 2 to entry: A marine cadastre is a type of georegulation related to property registration as addressed in
ISO 19152-2 where the concept of “land” is extended to include “over water”.
Note 3 to entry: Adapted from Reference [17].
3.1.6
marine georegulation
expression of a right, restriction or responsibility for one or more parties or group parties for a spatial
location, boundary, zone or space in the marine domain
3.1.7
maritime
bordering on, or concerned with, or related to the sea
[SOURCE: Reference [22]]
3.2 Abbreviated terms
BAUnit basic administrative unit
CRS coordinate reference system
DOALOS Division of Ocean Affairs and the Law of the Sea, office of legal affairs, United Nations
ENC Electronic Nautical Chart
GIS geographic information system
ISO 19152-3:2024(en)
guid globally unique identifier
IALA International Association of marine aids to navigation and Lighthouse Authorities
IETF Internet Engineering Task Force
IHO International Hydrographic Organization
IMO International Maritime Organization of the United Nations
LADM Land Administration Domain Model
MLB marine limits and boundaries
MRN Maritime Resource Name
Oid object ID
RRR right, restriction, responsibility
SOLAS International Convention on Safety of Life at Sea
UML Unified Modelling Language
UNCLOS United Nations Convention on the Law Of the Sea
uom units of measure
URI Uniform Resource Identifier
URN Uniform Resource Name
4 Conformance
4.1 Conformance requirements and testing
Conformance to this document consists of alignment with the requirements established in 4.3 and 4.4. The
abstract test suite given in Annex A describes a methodology which shall be used for testing conformance to
these requirements.
4.2 Conformance classes
Two conformance classes are identified in this document:
— one for the description of a LADM marine georegulation system in support of maritime limits and
boundaries for the UNCLOS
— one in support of other marine georegulation domain areas as outlined in Annex B.
The conformance class for a marine georegulation system in support of maritime limits and boundaries
[27] [20]
for the UNCLOS provides a general model that is used by S-121. This includes code lists and other
structures, such as the governance class MG_Governance and the attribute type Marine Resource
[18] [19]
Name (MRN) as defined in S-100, and geometry constraints to align with S-101. The m
...








Questions, Comments and Discussion
Ask us and Technical Secretary will try to provide an answer. You can facilitate discussion about the standard in here.
Loading comments...