Abstract:
In order to develop the
vineyard and orchard sector in Romania from
a sustainable point of view, the European
Union primarily finances plantations with
native varieties. To be able to talk about
sustainable development and environmental
protection, GIS systems should be structured
by fields of activity and become an interface
between man and nature. The integration of
these projects within the systematic cadastre
work would have the effect of obtaining a
better reassessment of the agricultural
potential of the area. Thus, the "Vasile
Adamachi" didactic farm of the Iasi
University of Life Sciences has reconfigured
the cadastral plots, currently occupying a total
area of 16.1 ha with vines and 12.2 ha with
fruit trees. This project to modernise the
vineyard/fruit-growing plantations was
realised from the rehabilitation funds of the
European Union, through the Payments and
Intervention Agency for Agriculture. The
creation by the Cadastre and Real Estate
Publicity Agency of an integrated cadastre
and land book system, as a "multipurpose"
type system within the National Cadastre and
Land Book Program, would help the
Payments and Intervention Agency for
Agriculture to identify agricultural real estate,
which includes vineyards/fruit trees, and
would encourage the owners of such
plantations to access projects from the
European Union funds for the modernisation,
maintenance in good condition or expansion
of vineyard and fruit-growing. Also, the
technical-legal situation of the existing real
estate at the administrative-territorial unit
level could be obtained in real time.