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Paris - Dec. 12, 2000 During a recent convention held in Paris in November on the European satellite navigation programme 150 representatives of 80 companies and institutions gathered to consider the future development and strategic value of the Galileo programme. Galileo is a proposal to provide an extremely precise and reliable service for the localisation of land, sea and air vehicles. Indeed, the system's high quality service will be based on guaranteed and certified data and will be complementary to, and inter-operative with, the American GPS service. Galileo will offer innovative applications for transport safety and provide the opportunity to create a new market sector involving all the European companies that develop space infrastructures, including the ground segment. The Forum discussed the way to make such an ambitious programme reality: the system architecture must be implemented by 2001 following the directives to be issued by the end of December by the organisations involved, i.e., the Council of the Transport Ministry of the EU and the ESA Council.
The addresses given during the conference highlighted the following:
Specifically, Alenia Spazio is responsible for the system definition, co-ordinating more than 70 companies. Related Links Galileo (GNSS-2) ESA Navigation GNSS SpaceDaily Search SpaceDaily Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express
Cape Canaveral - Nov. 10, 2000A Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite built by Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Sunnyvale, Calif., was successfully launched today from Cape Canaveral. This was the fifth successful launch of the new-generation spacecraft, designated GPS IIR. The company will supply 15 more of these satellites to the U.S. Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center, Los Angeles Air Force Base, Calif. for future launches. |
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