GPS NEWS
Russia blocked GPS data during NATO exercises: Norway
by Staff Writers
Oslo (AFP) Nov 13, 2018

Oslo on Tuesday pointed a finger squarely at Russia, accusing it of jamming GPS signals in Norway's Far North when it hosted NATO's massive exercises in October and early November.

"We know that jamming was observed between October 19 and November 7, originating from Russian ground forces in (the) Kola" peninsula, a region of northwestern Russia close to Norway, the Norwegian defence ministry said.

"We are following the situation closely, together with the authorities concerned," the ministry added in an email to AFP, confirming reports by Norwegian news agency NTB.

On Sunday, Finnish Prime Minister Juha Sipila had said the "almost certainly deliberate" disruption of GPS signals across Lapland had put civil aviation in the region at risk.

He had suggested Moscow could be responsible, saying it was "possible" it was involved.

Russia on Monday denied the allegation, calling it "baseless".

The jamming coincided with Trident Juncture 18, NATO's biggest military exercises since the end of the Cold War, held several hundred kilometres (miles) from Norway's border with Russia from October 25 to November 7.

Prior to the manoeuvres, Russia had vowed to "retaliate", calling the exercises "anti-Russian".

The satellite disruption led to Finnish and Norwegian civil airspace operators issuing official warnings to pilots that navigation signals in northeast Lapland were unstable.

In September 2017, Norwegian authorities reported jammed GPS signals affecting civil flights in the north of the country during Russia's large Zapad military exercise.

"The foreign ministry has on several occasions in the past raised the question with Russian authorities," the defence ministry said.


Related Links
GPS Applications, Technology and Suppliers

GPS NEWS
World's first 'Quantum' compass will supersede GPS
London (Sputnik) Nov 12, 2018
After millions of pounds of funding from the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) under the UK National Quantum Technologies Programme, British scientists have constructed what they claim to be humanity's first quantum 'compass,' a navigational device independent of the satellite-based Global Positioning System (GPS). The instrument, built by scientists at the Imperial College in London, England, is claimed to be able to ascertain the exact location of anything on Earth without relying on satellites, as d ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

GPS NEWS
New tool to predict which plants will become invasive

Fruit, vegetable shapes controlled by newly discovered genetic mechanism

Exposure to pesticides makes bees less social, reduces colony size

In China's Himalayas, a wine 'flying above the clouds'

GPS NEWS
Bringing photonic signaling to digital microelectronics

China challenges US to provide 'evidence' in trade secrets case

US accuses China, Taiwan firms with stealing secrets from chip giant Micron

Brain-inspired methods to improve wireless communications

GPS NEWS
Airbus delivers first A330 tanker aircraft to South Korea

US fighter jet crashes off Japan's Okinawa, crew rescued

Boeing braces for trade war headwinds in China

Verdego Aero to provide hybrid-electric power propulsion option for Transcend Air VY 400 VTOL

GPS NEWS
German court orders diesel bans in Cologne, Bonn

Electriq~Global launches water-based fuel to power electric vehicles

Carbon-busting system to launch at massive Las Vegas auto week

Driverless vehicle experts get hands on experience in South Australia

GPS NEWS
Trump to discuss trade war with Xi at G20 summit

Timeline for massive China-backed trade deal slips

Trump advisor's Wall St criticism 'way off base': official

China-backed trade deal pushed back to 2019

GPS NEWS
Bolsonaro election leaves indigenous Brazilians afraid for their land

Global reforestation efforts need to take the long view

Mangroves can help countries mitigate their carbon emissions

Rainforest destruction from gold mining hits all-time high in Peru

GPS NEWS
Alpine ice shows three-fold increase in atmospheric iodine

Improving Alignment and Testing of Earth Observation Satellites

NASA's ICON to explore boundary between Earth and Space

Illegal emissions threaten to undermine UN's optimistic ozone report

GPS NEWS
Nano-scale process may speed arrival of cheaper hi-tech products

Watching nanoparticles

Penn engineers develop ultrathin, ultralight nanocardboard

Physicists designed new antenna for supersensitive magnetometers of a new generation