The Department of Posts (DoP) has proposed the DHRUVA (Digital Hub for Reference and Unique Virtual Address) framework. To facilitate this, a draft amendment to the Post Office Act, 2023 has been introduced. This initiative aims to establish a Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) for address management, similar to Aadhaar for identity and UPI for payments.
What is DHRUVA?
DHRUVA acts as a foundational Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) designed to standardize and share physical addresses digitally.
- Tokenisation of Addresses: Similar to how UPI aliases replace bank account details, DHRUVA replaces physical addresses with “labels”
- Functionality: It creates a bridge between a user’s Descriptive Address (traditional text) and a Geo-coded Address (DIGIPIN).
- Consent Architecture: It operates on a consent-based model where users authorize who accesses their address and for how long.
Understanding DIGIPIN
DIGIPIN is the underlying location system developed in-house by India Post.
- Structure: It is a 10-digit alphanumeric code.
- Basis: Unlike traditional PIN codes based on postal zones, DIGIPIN is based on Geo-coordinates (Latitude and Longitude).
- Granularity: The system divides India into specific grids (approximately 4m x 4m or related blocks), assigning a unique code to every location.
- Nature: It is an open-sourced system, ensuring interoperability across logistics and gig platforms (e.g., Amazon, Uber).
Operational Mechanism
The framework mirrors the financial ecosystem (like NPCI) and involves multiple stakeholders:
- Address Service Providers: Generate proxy addresses/labels.
- Address Validation Agencies: Authenticate the validity of addresses.
- Governance Entity: An independent body to oversee the framework (similar to NPCI).
Strategic Significance & Challenges
- Service Delivery: Enables precise delivery in rural areas where descriptive addresses are unstructured.
- Portability: Allows seamless address updates across all service providers when a user relocates.
- The Urban Governance Dilemma:
- Limitation: The system links addresses to people (via consent) rather than structures.
- Impact: If citizens opt out of data sharing, it creates data gaps, potentially hindering urban planning and structural mapping.