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GPS NEWS
Russian, Chinese Navigation Systems to Accommodate BRICS Members
by Staff Writers
Moscow (Sputnik) Jul 07, 2015


Brazil, India and South Africa, along with Russia and China, are the five nations of the BRICS emerging markets, accounting for one-third of the world's economy and 40 percent of its population.

Russian and Chinese global navigation satellite systems are well suited to meeting BRICS members' civilian needs, chief analyst for GLONASS Union, Andrei Ionin, told Sputnik on Wednesday.

"All the studies show that the two systems [can] solve all civilian objectives. So GLONASS and BeiDou together can cater for all such tasks within BRICS," Ionin told Sputnik.

He pointed to the key importance of developing GLONASS within the BRICS framework. The GLONASS Union analyst said Russia's navigation system, with the exception of that of China and the United States, lacks global undertakings.

"The US GPS has global economic and military interests... In China, the navigation system is connected, first of all, to transport and the delivery of Chinese goods around the world," Ionin told Sputnik.

The analyst estimated that GLONASS spends $1 billion annually to service its navigation system, arguing that it needs to be offered on the BRICS platform to be commercially viable.

"Russia has no global economic interests. From this perspective, the main problem is to find a global task for GLONASS and global investors after that," Ionin told Sputnik.

Brazil, India and South Africa, along with Russia and China, are the five nations of the BRICS emerging markets, accounting for one-third of the world's economy and 40 percent of its population.

GLONASS Union, a non-commercial partnership of Russian companies that use navigation services, was designated by the Russian National Navigation Services Provider in 2012.

Source: Sputnik News


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Beijing (XNA) Jun 28, 2015
China has made breakthroughs in the anti-jamming capability of its Beidou satellite navigation system (BDS), the People's Liberation Army (PLA) Daily said Thursday. The new technology, developed by Wang Feixue and his team from the National University of Defense Technology, has made the satellites 1,000 times more secure, the newspaper said. In March, China launched the 17th BDS sate ... read more


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