From the cosmic vantage point of satellites circling Earth, India has now been mapped in extraordinary detail, right down to the contours of its smallest villages.

The Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro), on National Panchayati Raj Day, announced that it has completed high-resolution Land Use and Land Cover mapping for the entire country at a scale of 1:10000.

In simple terms, this means one centimetre on the map represents just 100 metres on the ground, sharp enough to distinguish a paddy field from a pond, a school from a sand quarry.

The dataset is now available to government organisations and has been integrated into the Gram Manchitra web portal of the Ministry of Panchayati Raj.

WHAT IS LAND USE AND LAND COVER MAPPING?

Land Use and Land Cover, or LULC, is a stocktaking exercise from space.

Land Cover refers to the physical material on the surface of the Earth, such as forests, water bodies, grasslands or concrete buildings.

Satellite-based Land Use and Land Cover mapping reveals everything from forests to farmlands across India. (Photo: Reuters)

Land Use, on the other hand, describes how humans use that land, whether for agriculture, housing or industry.

Together, they form a layered atlas of the country, shaped by decades of patient satellite observation.

HOW DOES THIS HELP A VILLAGE PLAN BETTER?

For a Gram Panchayat, the smallest unit of self-governance in India, this map is nothing short of a planning revolution.

Earlier, decisions about where to dig a borewell, build a road or set aside grazing land were often made on memory and intuition.

Village panchayats can now use satellite maps to plan borewells, roads and grazing land with precision. (Photo: Reuters)

Now, sarpanches and village officials can see their territory through a satellite’s eye, letting them prepare Gram Panchayat Development Plans rooted in evidence rather than guesswork.

It also aids in disaster preparedness, water conservation and afforestation drives.

WHAT IS THE GRAM MANCHITRA PORTAL?

Gram Manchitra, which roughly translates to village map, is a Geographic Information System (GIS) portal designed by the Ministry of Panchayati Raj.

A GIS is software that stitches together different layers of spatial information, much like transparent sheets stacked on a tabletop, allowing planners to view roads, water sources, soil quality and population data in a single frame.

Isro’s contribution adds the most detailed layer yet, turning Bhuvan Panchayat, the agency’s geospatial outreach to rural India, into a working tool for grassroots democracy.

– Ends

Published By:

Radifah Kabir

Published On:

Apr 26, 2026 17:31 IST

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