China puts final satellite into orbit to try to rival GPS network
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[June 24, 2020]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China on Tuesday
successfully put into orbit its final Beidou satellite, completing a
navigation network years in the making and setting the stage to
challenge the U.S.-owned Global Positioning System (GPS).
The idea to develop Beidou, or the Big Dipper in Chinese, took shape in
the 1990s as China's military sought to reduce its reliance on GPS,
which is run by the U.S. Air Force.
Coverage was limited to China when the first Beidou-1 satellites were
launched in 2000. Now Beidou-related services such as traffic monitoring
have been exported to about 120 countries.
As use of mobile devices expanded, China in 2003 tried to join the
Galileo satellite navigation project proposed by the European Union but
later pulled out to focus on Beidou.
The second generation of Beidou-2 satellites went into operation in
2012, covering the Asia-Pacific region.
In 2015, China began deploying the third generation of Beidou-3
satellites aimed at global coverage. The one launched on Tuesday was the
35th Beidou-3 satellite - with analysts looking at the system's
reliability and how it is rolled out.
"The civil signal from Beidou is no better than GPS or Galileo," said
Alexandra Stickings, a research analyst at the Royal United Services
Institute for Defence and Security Studies, a Britain-based think-tank.
"From a defence perspective, it is difficult to say whether Beidou is
superior. One hurdle that will have to be faced will be upgrading
receivers across military platforms, which will take time."
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A Long March-3B carrier rocket carrying the Beidou-3 satellite, the
last satellite of China's Beidou Navigation Satellite System, takes
off from Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Sichuan province, China
June 23, 2020. China Daily via REUTERS
Many countries using Beidou services are involved in the Belt and
Road initiative spearheaded by China to create a modern-day Silk
Road of trade and investment.
"This may prove popular among Belt and Road countries, particularly
those who may wish to be less dependent upon the U.S. GPS system,"
said Stickings.
"However, Beidou will need to prove its reliability and ability to
provide a consistent signal to gain the trust of users in the same
way that GPS is trusted globally."
(Reporting by Ryan Woo, Se Young Lee and Colin Qian; Editing by Tom
Hogue, Kim Coghill and Alison Williams)
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