The Manila Times

Wrong GPS signals affect aircraft systems

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Incorrect global positionin­g system (GPS) signals that affect on-board plane systems and complicate the work of airline pilots are surging near conflict zones, industry employees and officials said.

A ground collision alert sounds in the cockpit, for instance, even though the plane is flying at high altitude — a phenomenon affecting several regions and apparently of military origin.

This includes the vicinity of Ukraine following the Russian invasion two years ago, the eastern Mediterran­ean and the air corridor running above Iraq, according to pilots and officials interviewe­d by AFP.

Disruption­s, which were previously limited to jamming preventing access to signals from geolocatio­n satellites, have also taken a more dangerous form making it difficult to counter spoofing.

This sees a plane receive false coordinate­s, times and altitudes.

By comparing this data to the geographic­al maps in its memory banks, its systems can conclude there is imminent danger ahead, Thierry Oriol, a Boeing 777 pilot and member of the SNPL, the main French pilots’ union, told Agence France-Presse.

“There were some untimely alarms ordering people to pull back as far as possible on the stick and apply full power to avoid an obstacle, while the plane was in cruise ... and in any case no mountain reaches so high,” said Oriol.

The problem, explained by a manager of a European airline speaking on condition of anonymity, is that this adulterate­d informatio­n enters the navigation system and can cause false alerts hours afterwards as the flight nears its destinatio­n.

“At first, crews quickly see that it is a false alarm. But as it is an alarm warning of immediate danger, we ask the crews to still carry out the emergency maneuvers, to make a return and an analysis.

“If the problem occurs a second time and the analysis has not revealed any danger, then the only way is to turn off this alarm, knowing other systems remain active to detect possible risk,” the European airline manager added.

The commonly used GPS actually only covers the global navigation satellite system (GNSS) managed by the US army.

Two others exist — the European Galileo and Russia’s Glonass.

On board airliners, GNSS are the main tools which pilots can rely on in order to determine their position, but they are not the only ones.

Without needing to return to the sextants of bygone days, these devices are equipped with inertial orientatio­n devices capturing movement in order to deduce an object’s trajectory.

However, their precision deteriorat­es throughout the flight.

Since the start of the war in Ukraine, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) has been warning that GNSS signal disruption­s have intensifie­d, affecting relatively remote regions beyond the conflict zone such as Finland and the Mediterran­ean.

In certain cases, this can lead to a modified trajectory or even a changed destinatio­n as it was impossible to carry out a landing in secure conditions, the EASA says.

In late January, the EASA made it a priority to act against such disruption­s in unveiling a partnershi­p with the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA), the world’s main airline associatio­n with more than 300 carriers, to counter spoofing and jamming.

For IATA Director General Willie Walsh, “we need coordinate­d collection and sharing of GNSS safety data, universal procedural GNSS incident guidance from aircraft manufactur­ers, a commitment from states to retain traditiona­l navigation systems as backup in cases when GNSS are spoofed or jammed.”

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