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Brussels (AFP) May 04, 2007 The European Union is to consider taking over the Galileo satellite system as it is faced with demands for more time and extra public funds from the project's private builders, officials said Friday. EU officials said Transport Commissioner Jacques Barrot will present on May 16 a list of alternatives for the struggling project, which is meant to compete with the US Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) navigation system. They are expected to range from totally taking over Galileo, a system of some 30 satellites which could be operational as late as 2013, partially financing the project or abandoning it altogether, officials have said. An industry representative said one option seriously being considered would be for the EU to finance the first 18 satellites. One official said that completely taking it over would cost a little less than two billion euros (2.7 billion dollars) on top of the 1.5 billion euros the European Commission already allocated in the 2007-2013 budget period. Almost two years after being named, a private consortium of industry giants -- AENA, Alcatel, EADS, Finmeccanica, Hispasat, Inmarsat, TeleOp and Thales -- has made little progress on the project, angering the commission. The concession contract for Galileo remains unsigned as the firms squabble over who will do what and EU transport ministers have set them a May 10 deadline to work out their differences. But a letter of new demands which the consortium sent to the commission last week virtually assures that Wednesday's deadline is unlikely to be met. "They have come up with new conditions, they want more time, more money and more public guarantees," one official close to the project said. "If we give them more time, it could delay our satellite orders." In June, EU transport ministers are to re-examine the Galileo project, which is aimed at breaking Europe's dependence on the free GPS system used aboard many cars, boats and aircraft.
Source: Agence France-Presse Email This Article
Related Links ![]() Earlier this week, GIOVE-A successfully transmitted its first navigation message, containing the information needed by user receivers to calculate their position. Prior to reaching this milestone, the satellite had been broadcasting only the data needed for measuring the receiver-to-satellite distance. |
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