The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

China’s rival to GPS technology is looking to go global

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BEIJING: China’s alternativ­e to the American-owned GPS extended its coverage beyond the Asia-Pacific region with a goal of becoming a dominating technology in the future, spurring gains in shares of related companies.

The service, called Beidou, is now available in some parts of Europe and Africa within China’s Belt and Road initiative, spokesman Ran Chengqi told reporters here on Thursday.

The company, which uses a series of satellites to provide users’ precision positionin­g with an error of about 10ms, plans to launch 12 more satellites by 2020.

“From today, wherever you go Beidou will be with you, anywhere, anytime,” said Ran. China stocks linked to Beidou advanced yesterday.

China started work on its own satellite navigation and positionin­g system in the 1990s to reduce its dependence on the Global Positionin­g System (GPS) developed by the US.

Named after the Chinese word for the Big Dipper star pattern, the Beidou system is now in its third stage and is capable of providing navigation and positionin­g services in different geographic­al regions.

The goal is to have complete worldwide coverage by the end of this decade.

Beidou, which provides navigation and positionin­g for China’s military and critical infrastruc­ture, is finding increasing use in everything from mapping services to cars and smartphone­s.

China launched the 42nd and 43rd Beidou satellites in November.

Most smartphone chips sold globally will be compatible with Beidou, which is the first navigation system to have built-in telecommun­ications features such as text messaging.

Beidou is among a slew of ambitious projects that the world’s second-largest economy is undertakin­g to sharpen its competitiv­eness in aerospace.

Earlier this month, China sent a probe to the far side of the moon, a place no other country’s probe has ventured into.

The nation is also developing civil passenger aircraft that could eventually rival models from Airbus SE and Boeing Co.

The country’s private startups are racing to launch rockets to send satellites into orbit at low cost to meet demand for commercial space services.

From today, wherever you go Beidou will be with you, anywhere, anytime. Ran Chengqi

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