Thursday, October 30, 2003
India to invest $350 mn in EU's Galileo satellite project
Agence France-Presse Brussels, October 30
India is to take a 300 million euro ($350 million) stake in the European Union's Galileo satellite navigation system, the EU said on Thursday after China also signed up to the rival of the US GPS network.
"Third countries are more enthusiastic than certain European countries about Galileo," EU Transport Commissioner Loyola de Palacio said, referring ironically to wrangling in the 15-member bloc about funding for the project. The Indian contribution will add to the 200 million euros pledged by China for Galileo under an accord signed at an EU-China summit in Beijing on Thursday.
The announcement came after a visit to Brussels this week by Foreign Minister Yashwant Sinha, who said on Tuesday that Galileo was one of the subjects to be discussed at an EU-India summit in New Delhi late next month. The Galileo Joint Undertaking is a venture between the EU and the European Space Agency and will rival, and likely outperform, the Global Positioning System (GPS) of the United States.
Galileo, scheduled to be operational by 2008, is designed to encircle the globe with 30 satellites in medium Earth orbit, comprising 27 operational satellites and three reserves, plus two control centres on the ground. It should provide users, ranging from aircraft and shipping to cars and trekkers, with a navigational fix accurate to within just one metre, more accurate than the US system.
At present, the only global satellite system available to civilians is GPS, but it is accurate only to 100 metres for civilians, or 22 metres for the military, and is under the control of the Pentagon.
Galileo's total development and launch costs are put at around 3.2-3.3 billion euros, with initial running costs from 2008 onwards of around 220 million euros a year.
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