Want China Times, Staff Reporter 2014-06-26
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A model of China's Beidou satellite navigation system on display at the Zhuhai Airshow, Nov. 14, 2012 (Photo/Xinhua). |
Russia and
China are likely to sign a cooperation pact regarding ground operation stations
for Russia's GLONASS satellite and China's Beidou satellite, reports Huanqiu,
the website of China's nationalistic tabloid Global Times, citing Sergei
Savelyev, deputy head of the Russian space agency Roscosmos.
Savelyev
said that Russia expects an agreement with China, which will allow the
countries to build three ground operational stations in each other's territory,
with the number potentially increasing in the future.
At the St
Petersburg International Economic Forum 2014 held in late May, Savelyev also
said that Russia is preparing to discuss construction of GLONASS ground
operation stations with both China and India and expects to reach an agreement
of equal number construction by the end of the year.
The
Moscow-based Voice of Russia reported that the number may be more than three,
as China initially proposed setting up about a dozen Beidou stations in Russia
from the Urals to the Far East, and to host a similar number of GLONASS
stations.
A Russian
researcher told Huanqui that China and Russia are highly likely to cooperate in
a joint satellite navigation system, given that they share a common competitor
— the US Global Positioning System (GPS). The wise choice would be for Beijing
and Moscow to install each other's devices on the counterparts satellites, the
researcher said.
During the
2nd Technoprom International Forum held in Novosibirsk in Russia on June 5-6,
Russian deputy prime minister Dmitry Rogozin said that cooperation between
Russia and China in the field will not be limited to ground operational
stations, but will also include reception devices and related infrastructure.
"Our system is more suitable for northern, polar latitudes. The Chinese system
is more southern. Their complementary natures would result in a biggest and
most powerful competitor to any navigation system," he said.
Meanwhile,
Sergei Ivanov, chief of staff of the Presidential Administration of Russia,
said that in addition to ground operational stations in China, Russia plans to
construct 50 GLONASS ground operation stations with 36 countries. He said that
negotiations with Nicaragua, Vietnam, Iran and Indonesia are underway, while
agreements with Cuba and Spain have already been reached.
Roscosmos
also proposed to construct six ground operational stations in the US, but the
plan was turned down due to national security concerns, while the US has
already set up 11 GPS stations on Russian soil.
However,
Russia announced in May that it would suspend the operation of all 11 GPS
stations from June 1 due to poor progress in Russia-US talks over the
construction of Russian ground stations in the US. The GPS ground operational
stations will be permanently shut on September 1 if the two countries fail to
reach a consensus by then, according to Huanqiu.
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