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Milestone: China’s BeiDou System is Now a Global Standard in Commercial Aviation

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Milestone: China’s BeiDou System is Now a Global Standard in Commercial Aviation​

By Anubhav
Nov 17, 2023

China‘s BeiDou navigation system has achieved a significant milestone by being internationally recognized as a global standard for commercial aviation. This recognition marks a major leap in satellite navigation technology, positioning BeiDou as a viable alternative to the long-established US Global Positioning System (GPS).

BeiDou, completed in 2020, features a network of 56 positioning satellites. Its adoption by the International Civil Aviation Organization signifies its capability to provide reliable global navigation services, a critical factor for civil aviation. This development not only showcases China’s technological advancements but also introduces a new player in the global satellite navigation market.

The system’s integration into various domestic industries is noteworthy. BeiDou has been extensively used in China’s transportation, communication, and agricultural sectors, reflecting its versatility and reliability. In 2022, the satellite navigation industry in China, bolstered by BeiDou, reached a remarkable output value of 500.7 billion yuan, demonstrating the economic impact of this technology.

BeiDou’s recognition is more than just a technological achievement; it’s a strategic move by China to assert its presence in global technology markets. It reflects China’s efforts towards self-sufficiency in technology and its ability to provide alternatives to Western technologies.

The expansion of BeiDou has significant implications for international cooperation, particularly with countries involved in China’s Belt and Road Initiative. It opens up new avenues for China to extend its technological influence globally, particularly in regions seeking alternatives to Western satellite navigation systems.

 
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China’s GPS-like BeiDou navigation system recognised as global standard for commercial aviation in ‘important milestone’​

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China’s BeiDou system, which is similar to the US’ Global Positioning System (GPS), has been recognised by the International Civil Aviation Organisation. The move will bring more benefits to the global community, while it could boost Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative, analysts said. — SCM

Nov 17, 2023
China’s equivalent to the US’ Global Positioning System (GPS) has gained an international qualification that allows it to expand into global commercial aviation, with the “important milestone” a potential boost for the technology, analysts said.

The home-grown BeiDou system has been recognised by the International Civil Aviation Organisation as one of its standards, becoming a universal satellite navigation system for civil flights globally, the Civil Aviation Administration of China said on Wednesday.

“[This] fully proves that BeiDou has the ability to provide global navigation services in various industries,” the regulator said.

The Chinese system, completed in 2020, has 56 positioning satellites in its network.

It will also promote international cooperation and connectivity in the aviation industry
Guo Rui
It marked one of Beijing’s efforts to achieve tech self-sufficiency amid a tense relationship with Washington.

“It is indeed an important milestone,” said Guo Rui, CEO of Chongqing Changying Aviation Technology.

“It will increase the diversity and redundancy of navigation systems, providing more options and backups for possible failures or disruptions.”

BeiDou and the US-made GPS are two of the four core providers of global satellite navigation systems, with the network also including Russia’s Global Navigation Satellite System and the European Union’s Galileo.

China’s navigation system had already fostered a domestic market of more than 140bil yuan last year, industry and information technology minister Jin Zhuanglong said in October.

It has also achieved a wide range of applications in domestic transport, communications and agriculture, according to a report by the Global Navigation Satellite System and Location Based Services Association of China (GLAC) last week.

Of the 13 million BeiDou devices produced in the first six months of the year, more than 60% were used in the transport systems, while mobile electronic devices accounted for nearly 30 per cent and the agricultural sector 12%, according to the report.

The output value of China’s satellite navigation industry reached 500.7bil yuan (US$69bil) in 2022, more than 30% of which was direct research and development and production.

Nearly 70% was, meanwhile, the output value created by the applications and services of navigation systems, according to a separate report published by GLAC in May.

“We need to push it to go overseas,” said a Beijing-based analyst who asked not to be named due to the sensitivity of the issue.

“It may have broader application chances in countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative, and those are friendly with China.”

Similar to the US and Russian versions, BeiDou has both military and civilian systems, however, GPS has occupied the market for more than three decades and it retains the largest share of the world’s commercially available positioning systems.

In 2022, the GPS system held 42.9% of the global positioning systems market, according to a report by San Francisco-based market research company Grand View Research.

“BeiDou joining the network will bring more benefits to the global community, especially as China maps the Belt and Road Initiative’s growth,” said Tammy Qiu, industry insider and former national chair of the aviation and aerospace working group at a foreign chamber of commerce in China.

It will “forge the creation of an integrated application ecosystem, unleashing massive market opportunity,” she added.

 
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The US' worst fear has happened!China provides Beidou satellites to the Middle East to help!


China-Iran Partnership: A Game-Changer in Global Satellite Systems

 
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China’s Beidou challenges US GPS dominance,BeiDou being newer and more advanced than other GNSS​

October 26, 2023 - By Jesse Khalil

Fifty years since it was designed and approved by the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD), the GPS is at risk of losing its status as the world’s gold-standard location service, reported The Wall Street Journal.

In a recent paper published by Harvard’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, “China’s BeiDou: New Dimensions of Great Power Competition,” Sarah Sewall, executive vice president for strategic issues at IQT and co-authors Tyler Vandenburg and Kaj Malden outline their finding that China’s version of GPS is part of the country’s longstanding effort to join the technological ranks of leading nations and use its capabilities to achieve geopolitical advantage across the globe.

Sewall’s assessment of BeiDou’s technical superiority received some unexpected support from a government advisory board on GPS, which stated that “GPS’s capabilities are now substantially inferior to those of China’s BeiDou,” and urged the administration to regain U.S. leadership in the field.

The BeiDou constellation is newer and has more satellites than any other system and has more than ten times as many monitoring stations around the world than GPS does. As a result, BeiDou’s accuracy is much better in many places, including the developing world.

Sewall points out that in cases where BeiDou provides the most accurate positioning, navigation, and timing (PNT) data, particularly in the global south, China may be able to influence other nations’ economies, stating that it is one example of “a new form of great power competition that most in the U.S. government don’t recognize.” China is providing superior PNT information to enhance its diplomatic, economic and military power and the United States cannot afford to cede this area of longstanding advantage.

BeiDou being newer and more advanced than other GNSS, makes it easier for China to encourage other nations to use its signals and purchase specialized equipment, especially when equipment purchases are heavily subsidized by the Chinese government, harming the U.S. economy and its status as the leader of GNSS technology.

Recent launch and surveillance fears
On May 16, 2023, China launched its most recent BeiDou satellite to replenish the constellation, bringing its total to 56 satellites, nearly twice as many as the 31 GPS satellites.

The latest BeiDou satellites also feature two-way messaging, a feature that GPS does not have. It is mainly available in China and requires special chips that are not widely available in the consumer market. It enables users to send short messages in areas without ground network cell coverage and can be used for search and rescue operations.

The CNBC report noted the fear that, with its most recent enhancements, the BeiDou system could be used as a surveillance device — as the two-way messaging feature reveals a user’s locations as well as other types of data.

Additionally, with the growing number of applications for cellphones and an increase in autonomous vehicles that use the BeiDou system, more and more user data is being transmitted.

The U.S. military is upgrading GPS with more-modern satellites that are designed to give nonmilitary devices more-precise coordinates in more indoor and hard-to-reach spaces. However, the next-generation GPS service for civilians is not expected to be released for several years.

GPS pioneered the PNT industry by offering civilians a new, free-to-use system. While originally developed for DOD, it turned into a critical global infrastructure that underlies a vast swath of the U.S. economy.
Besides GPS and BeiDou, there are two other global navigation satellite systems (GNSS), Russia’s Glonass and the European Union’s Galileo, as well as regional systems from Japan (QZSS) and India (NavIc).

BeiDou, once a small regional network with clunky receivers and few civilian users, has grown significantly since launching its first two satellites in 2000. It now has more than 30 precision-enhancing monitoring stations and claims to pinpoint users’ locations to within several centimeters, along with offering basic two-way communication capabilities.

Both BeiDou and GPS offer a variety of nonmilitary benefits that expand beyond the systems’ original expectations, from Uber drivers who often rely on a smartphones GNSS data to locate customers to farmers who can use GPS-based applications for farm planning, field mapping, solid sampling and more. GPS has been called “the silent utility” because signals are used in almost every technology, said Dana Goward, president of the Resilient Navigation and Timing Foundation.

Looking forward
GPS guides U.S. missiles, ships and troops through more-secure military frequencies kept separate from its civilian signals. Its past dominance even made rival militaries reliant on the Pentagon-controlled system.
The U.S. military has long planned to upgrade GPS with a fleet of modernized and upgradable satellites that provide more-precise coordinates subject to less interference. The newer satellites broadcast data to civilian users over a new frequency called L5.

The Space Force has 17 L5-equipped satellites in orbit after a series of delays  but has yet to reach the 24 live satellites needed to run a reliable system. Some already-built satellites sit in a Colorado warehouse awaiting their turn for a funded launch.

The Space Force said in a statement that GPS continues to set the gold standard in its field.

“While other nations may report improvements in accuracy and equivalent performance in availability, GPS is still the clear leader in integrity and is the only system accepted for international flight use,” a spokeswoman for the branch’s Space Systems Command told The Wall Street Journal.

 
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Isn't elon's satellites doing that and that's why they're useful in ukraine?
 
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Next, the PDF Chinese is going claim that China 'invented' satellite assisted navigation.
 
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Congratulations to China.
Remember the US matured the GPS several decades ago, so one would expect any followers such as this one to have learnt from it and hopefully advance from the older one.

The main problem with anything CCP is not technology or the people, it is the untrustworthy nature of CCP. Some countries that are in the loan-shark clasp of CCP may adopt this but knowing Xi the Pooh can turn off their access with a phone call will dissuade most self respecting countries from signing up. They all know what CCP did to Alibaba, to Srilanka, to Pakistan and others.
 
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Congratulations to China.
Remember the US matured the GPS several decades ago, so one would expect any followers such as this one to have learnt from it and hopefully advance from the older one.

The main problem with anything CCP is not technology or the people, it is the untrustworthy nature of CCP. Some countries that are in the loan-shark clasp of CCP may adopt this but knowing Xi the Pooh can turn off their access with a phone call will dissuade most self respecting countries from signing up. They all know what CCP did to Alibaba, to Srilanka, to Pakistan and others.
You western worshippers can stick to your master's. The only ones that are untrustworthy are you and your western masters. mind to check your abysmal track record before bullshitting?
 
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You western worshippers can stick to your master's. The only ones that are untrustworthy are you and your western masters. mind to check your abysmal track record before bullshitting?
aren't you tired of deflecting and attempting to defend indefensible that CCP has been? I've pointed out specific cases for calling Xi's CCP untrustworthy and your response is "you western worshipper". For a change, try truth and you may better enjoy life
 
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aren't you tired of deflecting and attempting to defend indefensible that CCP has been? I've pointed out specific cases for calling Xi's CCP untrustworthy and your response is "you western worshipper". For a change, try truth and you may better enjoy life
You point your ***, lol, CCP has done millions times better than your incompetent government in every sector. this is the truth and fact plain to see by everyone who is not utterly blind.
 
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You point your ***, lol, CCP has done millions times better than your incompetent government in every sector. this is the truth and fact plain to see by everyone who is not utterly blind.
a few nerves struck there I guess. good for a CCPbot
 
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