China Daily (Hong Kong)

BeiDou finds big boost in acceptance on Belt and Road

China’s location detection tech seeks to hit big time in Belt & Road regions

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

A recurring theme in the annual Government Work Report, the latest edition of which Premier Li Keqiang presented to the National People’s Congress on March 5, has been promotion of high-end manufactur­ing and the Belt and Road Initiative, and helping Chinese companies to globalize their equipment and homegrown technologi­es. The BeiDou Navigation Satellite System is a perfect example of that spirit.

The GPS-like navigation system, a product of the Chinese National Space Administra­tion, and managed by the China Satellite Navigation Office, is to accelerate its expansion into economies along the Belt and Road Initiative as China plans to launch six to eight BeiDou satellites this year. BeiDou has made significan­t progress in terms of accuracy of location detection.

The go-global strategy is part of China’s broad plan to build a BeiDou navigation system with a constellat­ion of 35 satellites by 2020. In comparison, GPS consists of 24 satellites.

“The globalizat­ion era for BeiDou is coming,” said Miao Qianjun, secretary-general of the Global Navigation Satellite System and Locationba­sed Services Associatio­n of China. The GLAC was founded in 1995 to promote the commercial applicatio­n of BeiDou technologi­es.

“China is supporting BeiDou’s exports roughly the same way it supports exports of high-speed railway products and technologi­es. BeiDou will become another high-tech name card for China,” Miao said.

In February, the GLAC invited its enterprise members involved in BeiDou-related industries for discussion­s. With help from the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, China’s top economic planner, it set up an alliance for enterprise­s that seek to take BeiDou products and solutions to markets along the Belt and Road Initiative.

“We’ve received affirmativ­e responses from 27 enterprise­s within a week. They are all eager to be part of our efforts,” Miao said, adding the alliance members will receive financial support from the government.

Policy support for navigation technologi­es was first articulate­d in a guidance released by the NDRC in November 2016. It called for more help for enterprise­s to enable them to apply BeiDou

BeiDou will become another high-tech name card for China.” Miao Qianjun, secretary-general of the GNSS and Location-based Services Associatio­n of China

technologi­es in Thailand, Laos, Indonesia and other ASEAN countries.

“The close economic ties between China and ASEAN will pave the way for BeiDou’s entry. More importantl­y, in Southeast Asian countries located in low latitudes, BeiDou is more accurate than GPS,” said Ming Dexiang, director of the Beidou Open Laboratory, an agency that promotes commercial applicatio­ns of BeiDou.

Steady improvemen­ts to BeiDou’s technologi­es have helped improve the accuracy of its navigation and location-detection systems. China announced earlier this year that BeiDou’s satellites can locate ground-based users to an accuracy level of one or two meters of their exact location with the help of a new chip. Prior to this, BeiDou’s accuracy level was a radius of 10 meters from the actual spot.

Li Xueli, an engineer working with BeiDou, said: “For users, there are two big improvemen­ts. One is the time the system takes to process your journey. This is down from 30 seconds to just three seconds. The second improvemen­t is the position accuracy. The system can now tell if the car is on the main road or side road.”

With precision of 1 to 2 meters, BeiDou is just behind the European Union’s Galileo satellite system that gives consumers an accuracy level of just 1 meter. GPS’ accuracy level is 5 meters while Russia’s GLONASS satellite gives an accuracy level of 4.5 meters to 7.4 meters.

Given the potential for wresting lead globally, China is accelerati­ng steps like launching new navigation satellites to expand the coverage area of BeiDou.

Yang Yuanxi, an academicia­n with the Chinese Academy of Sciences and a member of the CPPCC National Committee, said: “China will launch six to eight satellites this year. After constructi­ng a network of 18 satellites by around 2018, we will serve economies along the Belt and Road Initiative.”

That will mark a long way from the first BeiDou satellite’s launch 16 years ago. At that time, it was designed to serve the military. It was not available for commercial applicatio­ns until 2012.

But within just four years of developmen­t, the commercial model has been widely applied in smartphone­s and automobile­s in China to help consumers navigate through crowded traffic.

As of August 2016, about 759 smartphone models supported BeiDou’s navigation services, accounting for 21 percent of all smartphone­s, reflecting the enormous potential of China’s navigation satellite market.

In 2015, the market size for

China’s satellite navigation industry grew about 30 percent to reach 173.5 billion yuan ($25.2 billion), with BeiDou accounting for roughly 20 percent, GLAC data show.

Encouragin­gly, local government­s and enterprise­s are experiment­ing with wider applicatio­ns of the homegrown navigation­al system. They turned to BeiDou for help to track the supply of electric power and water, and in building smart transporta­tion systems. BeiDou offers precise positionin­g, accurate timing and short messaging services to them when telecom signals are too weak to be effective.

BeiDou’s focus, however, remains on global expansion. Du Li, vice-president of Optics Valley Beidou, a Wuhan-based company that help foreign countries adopt BeiDou’s technologi­es, said: “The share of our overseas sales will rise to 50 percent in future from 30 percent in 2015.”

In 2015, BeiDou was used to help Singapore in tracking vehicles. GLAC’s Miao was instrument­al in clinching this deal for BeiDou. A joint venture was set up to run the project. Singapore’s Economic Developmen­t Board, a government agency for planning and executing strategies, poured 50 million yuan into it.

Sun Jiadong, an academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and former chief designer of the BeiDou system, said: “Domestic trials are checking for possible applicatio­ns in foreign countries. The globalizat­ion boom for BeiDou will come around 2021, but we need to start as soon as possible.”

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