Chinese satellite
navigation officials say they intend to field an operational system covering
all of Asia by 2010, but they are giving few details on the deployment plans
for their global system. In addition China has yet to complete frequency
coordination with the United States, Europe, Russia and others.
In presentations April 23
here at the Toulouse Space Show, these Chinese officials nonetheless said their
global Compass/Beidou system would be fully compatible with the U.S. GPS,
European Galileo and Russian Glonass global navigation constellations.
Like GPS,
Galileo and Glonass, Beidou/Compass would be free of direct user charges but
also feature an encrypted signal for authorized users only, presumably
including the Chinese military.
Chengqi Ran, vice
director of the China Satellite Navigation Project Center, said the secure
Beidou/Compass signal would be "a highly reliable signal dedicated to
complex situations."
Beidou/Compass is
designed to feature five satellites in geostationary orbit and 30 satellites in
medium Earth orbit. Ran and Xiaohan Liao, a deputy director at China's Ministry
of Science and Technology, said the first of the medium Earth orbit satellites,
launched in April 2007, is functioning well but is still the subject of
in-orbit validation.
Liao said China intends to operate a Wide Area Precise Pointing system using geostationary
satellites. China operates three Beidou/Compass satellites in geostationary
orbit. Liao said the wide-area coverage, to include all of Asia, should be in
operation by 2010.
Liao said China wants to ensure that the growing population of GPS users in China will have a smooth transition
from GPS-only devices to devices that receive both GPS and Beidou/Compass
signals. He said the market for GPS gear in China is expected to reach around
$5 billion in 2010.
China's intentions for Beidou/Compass remain a subject of
concern in the United
States, Europe, Russia and Japan, according to government officials
representing those countries at the Toulouse Space Show.
China's plans for an Asian regional system are the most
immediate concern to Japanese authorities, who are developing their own
regional system, called the Quazi Zenith Satellite System, because its three
satellites will be in a highly elliptical orbit whose apogee will be over Japan and Asia.
Satoshi Kogure, associate
senior engineer at the Japan Aerospace Exploration Japanese Agency, said some
in Japan fear the Chinese system and think "this is an important issue for
Japanese national security."
Kogure said China and Japan have had few, if any, talks about their respective systems, although both nations
are members of the International Committee on Global Navigation Satellite
Systems. This committee is next scheduled to meet in December in Pasadena, Calif.
"All the [satellite
system] provider nations have agreed in principle" to seek maximum
compatibility and interoperability among the different systems to permit users
to take maximum benefit from the proliferation of satellites now planned, said
Anthony Russo, deputy director of the U.S. National Coordination Office for
Space-based Positioning, Navigation and Timing. "But a lot of details
still need to be worked."
Europe's
Galileo managers are actively seeking Chinese clarification on plans for
Beidou/Compass so European engineers can freeze their plans for the signal
structure of Galileo this year, when contracts for the satellites are scheduled
to be signed.
"Our position with
the Chinese is that we need to make sure we all have the same understanding of
the problem," said Paul Verhoef, head of the Galileo unit at the European
Commission, which is financing Galileo's development. "It has taken the
Chinese awhile for them to realize that it is in their interest to [coordinate
signals and other compatibility issues] if they want to be in this community of
providers."
Verhoef noted that when
the U.S., Russian, Chinese and European medium Earth navigations are added
together, there could be 120 operational navigation satellites in medium Earth
orbit by the middle of the next decade plus the three Japanese elliptical
satellites.