China Daily

Beidou set to boost navigation services

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

Members of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on are boosting ties in satellite navigation services, as China’s homegrown Beidou Navigation Satellite System is set to achieve global coverage by 2020.

With steady progress in the accuracy of location detection, Beidou is being increasing­ly used in Pakistan. China and Russia have also signed a deal on the compatibil­ity and interopera­bility of Beidou and the latter’s GLONASS systems, which enables users of either of the systems to use the other without much extra cost.

Such progress dovetails with China’s plan to build a Beidou navigation system with a constellat­ion of 35 satellites by 2020. In comparison, the United States’ GPS consists of 24 satellites.

“The globalizat­ion era for Beidou is coming. Beidou will become another hightech name card for China, just as high-speed railways,” said Miao Qianjun, former secretary-general of the Global Navigation Satellite System and Locationba­sed Services Associatio­n of China.

Economic ties between China and other SCO members lay a foundation for cooperatio­n on satellite navigation services, Miao said.

But more efforts are needed to experiment with creative applicatio­ns in the domestic market, said Sun Jiadong, an academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and former chief designer of the Beidou navigation system.

“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,” Sun said.

Since 2000, when the first Beidou satellite was placed in space, 33 satellites have been launched for the network. The system began providing positionin­g, navigation, timing and message services to civilian users in China and parts of the AsiaPacifi­c region in December 2012.

By the end of this year, more third-generation Beidou satellites will have been placed into orbit and they will work with the earlier generation­s to cover all economies involved in the Belt and Road Initiative, according to the China Satellite Navigation Office.

By now, Beidou has covered nearly 30 countries and regions involved in the initiative, including Pakistan, Egypt and Indonesia. The satellite system has also been recognized by the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on and the Internatio­nal Satellite System for Search and Rescue, increasing its appeal in the global arena.

Such a wider coverage is already enabling popular applicatio­ns. For instance, Beidou is being used in Pakistan to assist city planning and traffic management. China and Russia have also set up a joint platform to monitor satellite navigation­s after the two countries signed a cooperatio­n deal in October 2017.

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