The
Indian government has approved spending 14.2 billion rupees ($316 million) to develop an independent regional
satellite navigation system that would launch starting in 2008 and reduce the
nation's dependence on the GPS system operated by the U.S. Department of
Defense.
The seven-satellite constellation
would be a stand-alone system and is independent of an Indian project to
enhance GPS signals in the region.
Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh's cabinet has given the task of creating the Indian Regional Navigation Satellite
System to the Indian Space Research Organisation
(ISRO), which originally proposed such a system in
2004.
In a May 9 announcement, the Cabinet Office
the said the system "will provide an
independent, indigenously developed constellation of satellites to provide
satellite-based position, navigation and timing service for critical national
applications."
Development and
deployment of the satellite constellation and ground infrastructure, plus
system verification and testing, is expected to take five to six years, the announcement
said.
In an interview, ISRO
spokesman S. Krishnamurthy said that while the project only now has received
formal cabinet approval, a sum of 4.4 billion rupees was allocated for
the effort in ISRO's budget for 2006-2007.
An ISRO performance
report released in March 2006 said "considerable progress" already had been made in design of
the ground system and that work was under way "for realization of navigational
satellite system series of satellites."
The
nominal U.S. GPS constellation consists of 24 satellites for full global
coverage. Krishnamurthy said ISRO's planned seven-satellite system will be enough to cover the Indian subcontinent.
He said the satellites will be built by ISRO's Satellite
Centre in Bangalore and launched aboard indigenously built Polar Satellite Launch Vehicles. The
first launch is scheduled for 2008 and the entire constellation is
expected to be in place by 2011, he said.
Krishnamurthy said ISRO
is fully aware of the huge cost involved in creating and maintaining a national
satellite navigation system and added that the decision
to make that investment was prompted by the need to have a system
that is fully under Indian control.
He said the project is independent of India's plans to
join Russia's Glonass and Europe's
planned Galileo satellite navigation systems.
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