A
row over Galileo, a rival of the U.S.-owned GPS, became a
flashpoint in Brexit talks after London accused the EU of
shutting British companies out of the project.
"Some surprising announcements or positions were recently made
public about Galileo," Delphine Geny-Stephann, a junior economy
minister, told French lawmakers in the May 17 hearing on Brexit,
the minutes of which were made public on Monday.
"Considering the cost of the program and the investment that
would represent, about 10 billion euros, we find it hard to
imagine they could go it alone," she said.
"Good luck with that," one lawmaker, Jean-Louis Bourlanges,
replied, according to the minutes.
Galileo was commissioned in 2003 and is due for completion by
2020. One expert said last month that any rival system could
cost about 3 billion pounds ($4 billion).
Geny-Stephann was asked about London's threats to withdraw its
authorizations to British companies working on Galileo.
"I see in that, more than anything else, a negotiation argument
aimed at opening talks," she said, according to the minutes.
The UK space agency, on behalf of the business minister Greg
Clark, wrote to British companies asking them to consult the
government before agreeing any new contracts to work on the
project, in a move aimed at stopping the transfer of technology
to EU companies.
Responding to the French minister's comments on Monday, a UK
Space Agency spokesman said if no agreement could be reached on
Galileo, the UK would need to consider alternatives to meet its
needs.
"The development of a domestic system is economically viable and
made possible by the world-leading expertise of the UK space
sector," the spokesman said.
Britain told the EU last month that it would demand the
repayment of up to 1 billion pounds if the bloc restricts its
access to Galileo.
(Reporting by Myriam Rivet and Michel Rose; Editing by Alexander
Smith)
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