Galileo, a 10 billion euro ($11.44 billion) satellite program
being developed by the EU as a rival to the U.S. Global
Positioning System, has emerged as a flashpoint between Britain
and the EU, which is already beginning to treat Britain as an
outsider.
Britain's finance minister Philip Hammond has approved 100
million pounds to explore a post-Brexit satellite system and an
official announcement will be made this week, the Sunday
Telegraph reported.
A spokeswoman for Britain's Department for Business, Energy and
Industrial Strategy declined to comment.
The European Commission has started to exclude Britain and its
companies from sensitive future work on Galileo ahead of the
country's exit from the EU in seven months time.
Galileo was commissioned in 2003 and is due for completion by
2020. One expert has predicted that it could cost Britain about
3 billion pounds to build a rival system.
The EU has said Britain will be able to continue to use
Galileo's open signal, but that Britain's military could be
denied access to the encrypted version when the satellite
becomes operational.
Britain has said it plans to press ahead with the development of
its own satellite navigation system if the EU continues to
insist that it will be barred from the secure elements of the
project and will demand a repayment of up to 1 billion pounds
for the work it has carried out on the project.
(Reporting By Andrew MacAskill. Editing by Jane Merriman)
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