[Asia Economy Reporter Yoo In-ho] The Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport announced on the 16th that it has published the '2019 National Land Monitoring Report,' which analyzed and diagnosed the entire national territory through administrative districts of cities, counties, and districts, as well as a grid system based on the 2019 National Land Survey.


The grid system divides the national land into standardized spatial units by segmenting it like a Go board at regular intervals horizontally and vertically, creating sections of 100m, 250m, 500m, 1km, 10km, and 100km sizes.


The 2019 National Land Monitoring Report includes results calculating accessibility to 생활SOC facilities and the population ratio by distance able to use 생활SOC facilities. It is expected to be actively utilized for diagnosing 생활SOC blind spots, discovering support projects for underdeveloped areas, and policy monitoring.


It serves as foundational data for data-driven scientific policy formulation on six major national land indicators: population and society, land and housing, economy and jobs, living and welfare, national land infrastructure, and environment and safety.



The 2019 National Land Survey data and National Land Monitoring Report are also expected to provide useful information for identifying medically vulnerable areas by region in the post-COVID-19 era.


This content was produced with the assistance of AI translation services.

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