The Daily Telegraph

Britain launches its first post-brexit satellite navigation system

- By James Titcomb

A BRITISH satellite navigation system has been launched to give pinpoint locations to aircraft, ships and driverless cars after Brexit meant the UK was ejected from the European alternativ­e.

The satellite company Inmarsat has switched on a UK “space-based augmentati­on system” (UKSBAS) designed to provide more secure and accurate positionin­g data than the public GPS used by smartphone­s and car sat navs.

Britain lost access to the equivalent European system, known as EGNOS, last summer as a result of Brexit. It is also unable to access the secure encrypted signal from Europe’s Galileo system..

Concerns about reliance on GPS have increased as more businesses and technology become dependent on satellite navigation, and amid Russia’s war on Ukraine. The Kremlin has repeatedly interfered with the signal using jamming technology.

UKSBAS works by adding an additional signal to GPS, which is run by the US government. The extra signal makes it less vulnerable to interferen­ce and provides more accuracy, down to a few centimetre­s rather than several metres. It is expected to be particular­ly important for aircraft taking off and landing, and for ships navigating narrow channels.

Todd Mcdonell, at Inmarsat, said that the signal would now be monitored before it is tested on planes, with wider use as soon as 2024. He said that government­s are becoming increasing­ly dedicated to having their own positionin­g systems. “As we move to more autonomous aircraft, ships, land vehicles and so on, the reliabilit­y and positional accuracy of navigation systems will go up substantia­lly,” he said.

The company is working with the Goonhilly Earth Station in Cornwall and software company GMVNSL on the system, which has been funded by the UK Space Agency.

Theresa May ordered work on a British equivalent to GPS in 2017 but the programme was cancelled due to the expected high cost of a sovereign system.

Kwasi Kwarteng, the Business Secretary, has said that Oneweb, the satellite internet company that the taxpayer has a stake in, could serve as the basis for a fully fledged positionin­g system, independen­t of GPS.

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