SWOTH Analysis for Geological Survey
This SWOTH analysis was carried by Peter Cook in 1994.
STRENGTHS OF GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
- Expertise / knowledge
- Excellence / high standing
- Impartiality
- National and international networks
- Massive data sets collected to uniform standards
- Long-term stability
- Multidisciplinary
WEAKNESSES OF GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
- Aging organization, with a skewed age profile
- Expertise not always up to date
- Inadequate funding
- Overwhelmed by data
- Conservative, with built-in inertia
- Not good at explaining geoscience and its relevance
- Conflict between "commercial" aims and public science responsibility
OPPORTUNITIES FOR GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
- Ever-greater need for Earth's resources
- Increasing environmental pressures
- Increasing use of underground utilities / urban services / transportaion
- Increasing cost and human impact of geohazards
- Resource and land-use conflicts require "honest broker"
- Networks in place for greater "internationallty"
- New ways to exploit existing data
- New "business" providing new income
- Awareness of sustainable development
THREATS TO GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
- Some government agendas:
- decreased public spending in science
- market testing
- commercialization of data sets
- more competition
- more geological "cells" in government departments / agencies
- Unwillingness to change
- Not-stable funding of long-term strategic geosciences
- Private sector in "traditional" survey area
- Belief (by government) that geological survey activity can be completed
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[TM 1995-09-28]