Deutsche Welle (English edition)

China launches final Beidou satellite to complete rival to GPS network

China has launched the final satellite in its Beidou geolocatio­n network, completing a project meant to rival the GPS network. But some doubt Beidou's potential for takeover.

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China on Tuesday launched the last satellite needed to complete its homegrown "Beidou" geolocatio­n system, which is meant to rival the GPS network operated by the US.

Chinese state broadcaste­r CCTV showed footage of the launch in southweste­rn Sichuan province. A small group of onlookers can be seen watching as the Long March-3 rocket blasts off against a lush mountain backdrop.

About a half an hour later, the satellite was sent into orbit, where it extended its solar panels to provide its energy.

The launch had originally been scheduled for last Tuesday, but was delayed due to unspecific "technical issues," China's space agency said.

Read more: Galileo satellite navigation system back in action after partial outage

A network to rival global powers The launch — the 55th in the Beidou family — marks the completion of a satellite network that is meant to make China a key competitor in the billion-dollar geolocatio­n services market.

Beidou, which is named after the Chinese for the plow or "Big Dipper" constellat­ion, hopes to rival the US's Global Positionin­g System (GPS), Russia's GLONASS, and the EU's Galileo.

The system's chief designer Yang Changfeng said the launch shows that China's attempt to provide global coverage has been "entirely successful."

"In actual fact, this also signifies that we are moving from being a major nation in the field of space to becoming a true space power," Yang told broadcaste­r CCTV.

Read more: Chinese satellite navigation system to compete with GPS

A guide for fishing boats and missiles alike

China began building the global navigation system in the early 1990s. The intention was to help cars, fishing boats, and military tankers navigate using data from Chinese satellites.

Today the service is used on millions of mobiles phones for everything from finding restaurant­s and gas stations to guiding missiles and unmanned drones.

Originally limited to the AsiaPacifi­c region after its launch in 2012, Beidou has provided worldwide coverage since 2018.

Some 120 countries use Beidou's services to monitor port traffic and to guide rescue operations during disasters, Chinese state media reported.

Skeptics doubt Beidou's potential

Beijing hopes that its trillion-dollar Belt and Road global infrastruc­ture project will convince more countries to use the Beidou technology, an attempt to wrench some of the market share away from the US.

Some experts, however, are skeptical that this would be possible in the near future.

Speaking with AFP, astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonia­n Center for Astrophysi­cs Jonathan McDowell said, "I think the Beidou-3 system being operationa­l is a big event. This is a big investment from China and makes China independen­t of US and European systems."

But he did not think China would be able to "supplant GPS in the next 10 or even 20 years." kp/aw (AP, Reuters) var pymParent = new pym.Parent( 'promio-pym-container', 'https://system.promioconn­ect. com/ register/ 16401/ default/en/newsletter-form', {} );

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