On the afternoon of March 30, the Ministry of Agriculture and Environment coordinated with the Ministry of Public Security to organize a conference to deploy the work of surveying, mapping cadastral records, registering land, preparing cadastral records and building and completing the national database (CSDL) on land.
At the conference, Minister of Agriculture and Environment Tran Duc Thang emphasized that the database is the core foundation of digital transformation. The construction and completion of the national land database is not only a professional task but also a key political task, demonstrating the determination of ministries, sectors, and localities in implementing resolutions on digital transformation.
Over the past time, the Ministry of Agriculture and Environment has closely coordinated with the Ministry of Public Security, ministries, branches and localities to implement the 90-day and night campaign to enrich and clean up the national land database, initially achieving positive results, contributing to improving data quality according to the requirements of "right - sufficient - clean - living - unified - shared".
Reporting at the conference, Mr. Mai Van Phan, Deputy Director of the Department of Land Administration, said that there are currently about 106 million land plots nationwide, of which only about 61 million plots have been updated to the database; only about 24 million plots meet the "right, sufficient, clean, live" standards. Thus, about 45 million plots have not been generated data and nearly 37 million plots need to be cleaned, compared, and updated.
This is a very large workload, requiring ministries, branches and localities to focus highly, synchronously deploy technical solutions and organize implementation, striving to complete it in 2026.
At the central level, the Ministry of Agriculture and Environment has built 4 important component data groups, including: land use status data; national land use planning and plan data; land price framework data; basic survey data on land.
Locally, the issuance of identification codes for more than 69.7 million land plots has been implemented, creating a foundation for standardization and data interconnection.
According to Plan No. 2959/KH-BNNMT-BCA dated March 29, the implementation time is 9 months, from April 1 to December 31, 2026 nationwide. Key tasks include: reviewing and cleaning up the entire existing land database; surveying and mapping cadastral records; land registration; preparing cadastral records and building land databases.
After data cleaning, the core task is to synchronize the three information blocks and automatically match information between land users, property owners and the national population database managed by the Ministry of Public Security.
This data connection and sharing contributes to improving management efficiency, reducing administrative procedures, increasing transparency and better serving people and businesses.