You are here: Home Breaking news Second satellite to be launched for EU Galileo satnav project
Document Actions

Second satellite to be launched for EU Galileo satnav project

08 April 2008, 01:00 CET

(LUXEMBOURG) - A second experimental satellite for the EU's Galileo satellite navigation project will be launched from Kazakhstan on April 27, the European Commission announced Monday.

The "Giove B" satellite, propelled by a Russian Soyuz rocket will blast off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in the early hours of the morning but a year late.

The long-delayed European project is meant to challenge the dominance of the US-built Global Positioning System (GPS), which is widely used in satellite navigation devices in vehicles and ships.

"Today, we sent a clear signal to Europe and the whole world that we are still firmly committed to provide all European citizens and enterprises with a high-quality satellite-navigation service by 2013," said Radovan Zerjav, transport minister for Slovenia which holds the EU's rotating presidency.

"We will create new jobs and Europe will claim its rightful place side by side with the technologically most developed world powers," he added.

Work on the project, already running five years behind the initial schedule, stalled last year as cost over-runs piled up, private contractors bickered and member states lobbied for their own industrial interests.

So far just one purely experimental satellite, with a limited lifespan, has been put in place, in 2005.

The two experimental satellites are to be followed, some time, by some 30 satellites placed in permanent orbit at an altitude of 20,000 kilometres (12,400 miles).

European Union transport ministers, meeting in Luxembourg Monday, reached a compromise on the role that the European Parliament will play in the management of Galileo, which will be EU-owned.

The political control of the project will be performed by the EU member states and the European Parliament, with assistance from an informal body dubbed GIP (Galileo Interinstitutional Panel).

The assembly will adopt the plan at a first reading this month, EU Transport Commissioner Jacques Barrot said.

With that managerial problem out of the way negotiations should be able to start on handing out contracts for work on the Galileo project to European industry.

The 3.4 billion euro (5.3 billion dollar) cake will be divided into six segments consisting of the satellites, launchers, computer programmes, ground stations, control stations and the system's operation.

Text and Picture Copyright 2008 AFP. All other Copyright 2008 EUbusiness Ltd. All rights reserved. This material is intended solely for personal use. Any other reproduction, publication or redistribution of this material without the written agreement of the copyright owner is strictly forbidden and any breach of copyright will be considered actionable.




Cache EUB's Breaking News Portlet as HTML
ECTACO translators
ECTACO iTRAVL NTL & Alpine series translators
Sponsor this channel
Cache EUB's Upcoming Events Portlet as HTML
Text links
Text links
Your link here