Tag: European Union

  • Switzerland Joins the EU’s Galileo Program

    Switzerland has signed a cooperation agreement to participate in the Galileo and EGNOS programs, the pillars of the EU’s Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS). Switzerland will now fully financially participate in the programs, and will retroactively contribute €80 million for the period 2008-2013.

    The agreement, signed in Brussels December 18, 2013, also covers cooperation in areas such as security, export control, standards, certification and industrial cooperation.

    The Swiss government is not a member of the European Union, but does hold membership in the European Space Agency (ESA). Norway, another ESA member who is not a member of the EU, signed a similar agreement with the commission in 2010.

    Swiss authorities will pay an annual Galileo fee of €27 million to the commission for access to Galileo services, but access to the Public Regulated Service (PRS) signals is still being negotiated. PRS signals will be restricted to authorized users by governments for sensitive applications that require a high level of continuity.

    “I welcome Switzerland’s decision to fully step on board the European space programme,” said European Commission Vice-President Antonio Tajani. “This co-operation will not only help to provide better results for the EU’s satellite navigation services, it will also open up a series of business opportunities for small and medium sized enterprises both from Switzerland and the EU.”

    Through its membership of the European Space Agency (ESA), Switzerland has contributed to Galileo’s development phase. For example, the state-of-the-art hydrogen-maser clocks used by the Galileo satellites originate from Switzerland. Such extremely accurate clocks are crucial to a number of sectors. Wireless telecommunication networks use Galileo satellites’ timing signal for network management, for time tagging and for synchronization of frequency references. Certified time stamps are also necessary for applications such as electronic banking, e-commerce, stock transactions, quality assurance systems and services.

    With the signing of this agreement Switzerland will now participate in the EU satellite navigation programs and in their committees and working groups.

    Studies show that Galileo will deliver around €90 billion to the EU economy over the first 20 years of operation, while from now until 2020, the EU will spend €7 billion on satellite navigation. Switzerland’s financial contribution for the period 2014-2020 will be calculated in accordance with the standard formula1 applied for the Swiss participation in the EU research Framework Programme.

  • EU to Meet with China on Nav Dispute

    The European Union (EU) and China will be meeting in December in Paris to discuss overlapping radio frequencies both plan to use for their future encrypted government/military satellite navigation services, according to a joint statement from both parties, reports Space News.

    The December meeting will be conducted under what the Joint Statement on Space Technology Cooperation specifies as the ITU Framework. ITU is the International Telecommunication Union of Geneva, a United Nations affiliate that regulates satellite orbital slots and frequencies.

    The statement was signed as an annex to a broader EU-China summit held September 20 in Brussels. As Space News reports, the two sides are continuing collaboration on satellite navigation despite the signal conflict, which has been a subject of debate for at least two years. The 27-nation EU and China have agreed to continue the China-Europe GNSS Technology Training and Cooperation Center.

  • The System: Galileo Removes Manufacturing Barrier

    With final satellite construction bids pending as this magazine goes to press, the Galileo program clarified a recent round of launch postponements and announced that the European Union (EU) will rescind its requirement for a special license to manufacture and sell Galileo receivers.

    “We have an ambition to become, after GPS, the second system of choice,” stated Paul Verhoef, program manager of the EU satellite navigation programs, at the World Congress of the International Association of Institutes of Navigation (IAIN) on October 28. “In order to reach that, the user market is key. We are currently putting our hands to the last bits and pieces of the documentation [revising the previous Galileo Interface Control Document], to be published in a few weeks’ time. We will no longer require a licensing document in order to manufacture and sell devices. We had to do this bit of work to follow up on the initial [different] preparations made under the public-private partnership.”

    Contract by Christmas. The first two in-orbit validation (IOV) satellites will be launched in November 2010, and the next two in April 2011. Verhoef referred to the previous Galileo full operational capability (FOC) date of 2013. “You now know we are not going to meet that date,” said Verhoef.

    “We come to the procurement as it stands at this moment. We are procuring the capacity through six main work packages. We are on track to announce the satellite contracts before Christmas, as well as the system support contract. Perhaps the launch contract, but perhaps not until after Christmas. The other contracts are not time-critical at this point, therefore we have delayed them slightly; to be announced in first quarter 2010.

    “We have split the total of the 28 satellites we will order into two work orders. In the first, we will procure up to 22 satellites, and in the second the rest. Industry bidders are to submit their best and final offer for 8, 14, and 22 satellites. The most crucial decision in the whole procurement will then be for us to go single-source with one of them, or dual-source with both.”

    The final and “best” bids were due to the EU and ESA on November 13 from the two consortia competing to build out the constellation.The EADS Astrium-Thales Alenia Space partnership, larger of the two, has by conventional wisdom the inside track to win the contract. However, the competion, led by OHB of Germany, includes Surrey Satellite Technology Limited (SSTL) of the UK, which has the better track record in Galileo satellite manufacture to date.

    “A double supplier would mean spending extra money,” said Verhoef in his IAIN remarks, “but it would bring some risk reduction. Will it be worth the extra money we will have to pay for it? By the end of the year we hope to have the answer for that. By the end of the year we will have under contract the delivery of 22 satellites, and the launch contract. Then we will be able to give a very clear schedule on deployment.

    “There remains uncertainty on where it will end. Budget questions depend on parliament and the EC, which will drive the final aspects of the work. We live in difficult economic times, and there are some things to be determined in 2014, when the next funding cycle will begin.

    “By the end of 2013, we will have an initial constellation of 16 satellites: four IOV and 12 FOC satellites. This is targeted to provide the open service, and parts of the other services: safety of life, PRS, and commercial. Completion of these will depend on funding questions.”

    See the Satellite. An online story on Britain’s BBC News channel contains a two-minute video clip (see PHOTO) showing close-ups of the antennae and other elements of the IOV satellite under manufacture at an EADS Astrium facility in Portsmouth, United Kingdom.

    Once completed, the payload will travel to Thales Alenia Space in Rome, Italy, for attachment to the main spacecraft bus, with a propulsion system, avionics, and solar panels, and then go to the European Space Agency (ESA) port in Kourou, French Guiana. Both intial satellites are intended to rise aboard a Russian Soyuz rocket, which has had its own problems recently, with delays due to changes necessary for the ESA launch pad.

    System Updates

    GPS to Fly Without Back-Up. U.S. President Obama and Congress have removed a key back-up system for GPS. The president signed the Department of Homeland Defense appropriations bill that allows termination of Loran-C in January 2010. Loran-C and modernized eLoran could prevent national and industrial infrastructure breakdown in the event of disruptions, interference, or intentional jamming. The House of Representatives passed a Coast Guard authorization bill calling for Loran termination, in line with the DHS appropriations bill. For details see www.pnt.gov; see also “Letters” in this issue, page 13. The Coast Guard Commandant and DHS are expected to sign off almost immediately that Loran-C can be terminated. Once they sign it, Loran signals could go off the air as early as January 4, 2010.

    GLONASS Signal Misbehavior. The planned September and October launches of three new GLONASS-M satellites were scrubbed, and the traditional Christmas launch appears doubtful at best. The Russians have commissioned a special task force to investigate a problem with the signal generator aboard an orbiting satellite, detected in late August. It is not known whether the same problem affects three satellites on the ground, destined for imminent launch.

    Beidou’s Second Bird. Beidou G2, launched last April, has drifted 10 degrees from its initial geostationary orbital slot. This may mean that it is uncontrollable and has been abandoned. Such a failure — if it is one — may delay launch of new satellites to begin filling out the Chinese GNSS. As previously reported, demonstration satellite Beidou 1D is also adrift.