
08 January 2004
U.S., EU Working on Global Positioning Systems Agreement
January 8: Department of State media note
The United States and the European Commission are negotiating
an agreement to establish a mutually beneficial cooperative relationship
between the U.S. Global Positioning System (GPS) and Europe's planned
Galileo satellite navigation system, the State Department said
January 8 in advance of the next round of discussions scheduled
for late January.
The United States and Europe "have an historic opportunity
to create independent, cooperative systems that will provide better,
more reliable service to civil users around the world," the
Department said.
"An agreement on GPS/Galileo cooperation should also allow
the Galileo program to meet its performance requirements while
protecting U.S. and NATO national security requirements through
signal separation between Galileo's services and the GPS military
service (M-Code)."
Following is a State Department media note:
(begin text)
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Office of the Spokesman
January 8, 2004
Media Note
UNITED STATES EFFORTS TO ESTABLISH A MUTUALLY BENEFICIAL COOPERATIVE
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE U.S. GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM (GPS) AND
EUROPE'S PLANNED GALILEO SATELLITE NAVIGATION SYSTEM
During the last year the United States and the European Commission
(EC) have had productive policy and technical discussions that
have moved both sides closer to agreement regarding GPS and Galileo
cooperation. At talks in November 2003 in The Hague, Netherlands,
the European Commission proposed a signal structure for Galileo's
Public Regulated Service that would resolve U.S. concerns relating
to adverse impacts to allied military operations. The next round
of discussions, scheduled for the end of January in Washington,
will address similar factors concerning Galileo's Open Service
(OS) signal structure, as well as other related civil use issues.
The Global Positioning System (GPS) managed and operated by the
United States Government is used for a wide array of economic,
scientific, and military applications. GPS consists of a constellation
of at least 24 satellites and associated ground support facilities.
The satellites emit signals that can be converted into precise
positioning and timing information anywhere in the world. Over
the next decade Europe plans to build a satellite navigation system
of its own, known as Galileo. The United States plans to modernize
the GPS satellite constellation in roughly the same timeframe.
The United States and Europe therefore have an historic opportunity
to create independent, cooperative systems that will provide better,
more reliable service to civil users around the world.
To that end the United States and the European Commission are
engaged in negotiations on an agreement to establish a mutually
beneficial cooperative relationship between the U.S. Global Positioning
System (GPS) and Europe's planned Galileo satellite navigation
system. The United States hopes to ensure that GPS and Galileo
are compatible and that their civil services are interoperable,
thereby maximizing potential benefits for all civil users of satellite
navigation services. An agreement on GPS/Galileo cooperation should
also allow the Galileo program to meet its performance requirements
while protecting U.S. and NATO national security requirements through
signal separation between Galileo's services and the GPS military
service (M-Code).
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