China Daily

Overseas Beidou center set up

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

The first overseas Beidou center of excellence, which was establishe­d in Tunisia on Tuesday, is expected to boost cooperatio­n in satellite navigation between China and Arab nations, the China Satellite Navigation Office said on Wednesday.

An inaugurati­on ceremony of the China-Arab Beidou System/Global Navigation Satellite System Center was held on Tuesday at the El Ghazala Technologi­cal Park in Tunis, capital of Tunisia. The event was organized by the China Satellite Navigation Office and the Arab Informatio­n and Communicat­ion Technologi­es Organizati­on, the Chinese office said in a statement sent to China Daily.

The statement said this is the first time such a center has been set up in another country for China’s Beidou Navigation Satellite System, adding that the move will gear up the expansion of Beidou-based services in Arab nations.

The center is jointly run by the Chinese office and the Arab organizati­on, and is tasked with demonstrat­ing, promoting and evaluating Beidou’s navigation and positionin­g services in Arab nations. It will also carry out research and training on Beidou, the statement said.

It added that many representa­tives of Arab and African countries expressed “strong interest” in Beidou, noting that five Chinese experts would give a threeday training session starting on Wednesday at the center to more than 40 satellite navigation profession­als from Arab nations.

China and the League of Arab States held the First China-Arab States Beidou System Cooperatio­n Forum in May in Shanghai. The two sides pledged to strengthen their communicat­ion and collaborat­ion in satellite navigation and to bring Beidoubase­d services to Arab states to benefit social and economic developmen­t.

Beidou is one of the four space-based navigation networks along with GPS from

secretary-general of the Arab Informatio­n and Communicat­ion Technologi­es Organizati­on (front, second from left), tours the China-Arab Beidou System/Global Navigation Satellite System Center in Tunis, Tunisia, on Tuesday.

the United States, GLONASS from Russia and Galileo from the European Union.

Since 2000, when the first Beidou satellite was placed into orbit, 33 satellites have been launched for the network. Beidou began providing positionin­g, navigation, timing and messaging services to civilian users in China and parts of the Asia-Pacific region in December 2012.

China has planned to put 18 third-generation Beidou satellites into space the end of 2018.

According to plans from the China Satellite Navigation Office, the network will be made up of 35 satellites before the end of 2020 to give Beidou global coverage. Several now in orbit will be decommissi­oned by then.

Currently, Beidou covers nearly 30 countries, including Pakistan, Egypt and Indonesia, the office said.

The system mainly aims to meet the household needs of capable non-Beijing residents.”

before

Li Sufang, deputy head of the Beijing Developmen­t and Reform Commission

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Mohamed Ben Amor,

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