Transcript Titolo

EGNOS
European Geostationary Navigation Overlay Service
Giorgio Solari
Galileo Joint Undertaking
EGNOS Workshop
Krakow, 24 September 2004
The European Strategy
EGNOS
Step 1: EGNOS to provide civil
complement to military GPS and
GLONASS, validation of services
from 2004
EGNOS is an initiative of the European
Commission, Eurocontrol and ESA
Step 2: GALILEO is to achieve
European sovereignty through
dedicated system under civil
control: into operations by 2008
GALILEO is an initiative of the European Commission and ESA
Development Phase
Institutional Framework
esa
TRIPARTITE AGREEMENT
CNES
NMA
EGNOS
INDUSTRY
AENA
DFS
DGAC
ENAV
NATS
NAV-EP
Skyguide
V
T
EGNOS Key Milestones
 EC, ESA and Eurocontrol submits a joint proposal for the lease
of Inmarsat-III Navigation Transponders.
Contract awarded for 2 GEO satellites.
1994
 EU Council conclusions, inviting EC to contribute to the
implementation of GNSS-1
1995
 Approval of ESA ARTES-9 Programme Declaration, including
the EGNOS Technical Development
1996
 Signature of European Tripartite Agreement between EC, ESA
and Eurocontrol for development and validation of a
European GNSS-1 operational capability
1998
 EU Council Conclusions on Integration of EGNOS into
GALILEO
2004
 2007- 2008: EC will consider further contributing to the funding
under the next Financial Perspectives (extract from Council
EGNOS: the European SBAS
GLONASS
GPS
EGNOS
GBAS
Ground Based
Augmentation Systems
Local Area
Systems
Europe
GNSS-1
MSAS
Japan
WAAS
US
UBAS
User Based
Augmentation Systems
User Equipment
Hybridisation
& Processing
GAGAN
India
SBAS
Space Based
Augmentation Systems
Main Functionalities
and
Added Value
GEO
Wide Area
Differential
Corrections
Integrity
(Use /
Don't Use)
+ SAFETY
+ ACCURACY
The EGNOS rollout varies by service
Open service operations commence imminently
EGNOS Service Implementation Roadmap
Commercial
Service
Readiness
Open Service
Readiness
2004
Actions
Q1
System Evolutions
• Deliver system
• Certify operations for SoL
• Commercial service upgrade
• Extend to Mediterranean
• Extend to Africa
Services
• Open Service
• Commercial Service
• Safety Of Life Service
Q2
Q3
Safety
Service
Readiness
2006
2005
Q4
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Q1
Q2
Q3
2007
Q4
Q1
Q2
EGNOS service definition
Service
Performance
Open
Declared:
Accuracy H:2, V:2-3,
Availability: 99%,
No integrity.
SoL
Guaranteed:
Accuracy H:16, V:8,
Availability: 99%,
Safety of Life
Integrity,
Safety of Life
Continuity.
Data
delivery
No guarantees.
Reliance on integrity
forbidden or
discouraged.
Liability disclamer.
Geo
Broadcast
Open
Guaranteed:
Accuracy H:2, V:3,
Availability: 99%,
Commercial
Integrity.
Commercial
Guaranteed:
Accuracy down to
cm level
Delivered
performance can be
customized per
client
Service guarantees/
Liabilities
Terrestrial
Controlled
Access
Service guarantees to
SLA signatories.
Commercial
compensation scheme.
EEO Limited liability.
Service guarantees to
SLA signatories.
Commercial
compensation scheme.
EEO Commercial
liability.
Certification
Requirement
No
Yes
No
EGNOS Service Provision Value Chain
Service
Utilisation
Final users/customers
Service fee / Service Level Agreement
Service
Distribution
Added value Service Providers
Service fee /
Service Level Agreements
Safety
of Life
Service
Service
Provision
Commercial
Service
SAR
Service
Open
Service
Signal
and data
provision
GEO Nav Open Signal
Control
Access
Data
GEO SAR Signal
E
S
D
P
EGNOS promises significant public benefits
across industries and for the community
MEUR
EGNOS Enabled Benefits1)
Conclusions
1600
• EGNOS is capable of providing
significant macro-economic / public
benefits to European businesses and
consumers, e.g.
1400
1200
1000
– Helps in the implementation of the
European Transportation Policy
800
– Enables harmonised performance
from a pan-European radionavigation infrastructure
600
– Provides the potential to enhance
safety across all modes of transport
and in the movement of dangerous
goods and materials
400
200
0
2005
1)
2010
2015
PwC, Development of a Business Plan for the GALILEO
Programme, TREN/B5/23-2001, Phase II – Part 3 EGNOS, 17
January 2003.
– Acts as an enabling technology for
enhanced energy efficiency
EGNOS delivers a variety of services
to meet user needs
Attributes of the EGNOS Services
MEUR
Service Revenue Potential
40
35
Limited
revenues for
EGNOS
Operator
30
25
Safety
Assured
Service
Guarantees
Service
Accuracy
Open
Access

-
-
Commercial

-

Safety of
Life



20
15
10
5
0
2006
2007
2008
2009
2011
2013
2015
Note: It still needs to be demonstrated that these revenues can
be recovered.
OAS revenues do not accrue to the EGNOS Operator
Aviation charging mechanisms exist
pending fair allocation of EGNOS costs per user community
Aviation Cost Allocation & Recovery Mechanisms
Public Private Partnership
Private sector is key for
• commercial orientation (secure revenues)
• efficient management
• financing
All parties who contributed to the EGNOS
development will be involved in the future
decisions and should conclude an appropriate
agreement with the GJU
International Context
 EGNOS covers almost all of Europe, except the edge
of Eastern Europe (e.g. Ukraine, Bielorussia,
Russia)
 EGNOS is interoperable with other regional SBAS
systems (US WAAS, Japanese MSAS, Indian
GAGAN), complying with international standards
(ICAO SARPs) for worldwide seamless navigation
 Coverage can be extended to neighboring regions,
as Eastern Europe edge, the Mediterranean, Africa
and part of Middle East
 Cooperation with these extension area is
progressing at different pace
 System replicas could also be implemented in order
to provide SBAS coverage over other regions.
Discussions on potential cooperation are still at an
early stage (e.g. China, Latin America)
GPS+ SBAS + Galileo:
GNSS strategy for Civil Aviation
Requirements
Quantitative
Requirements
Qualitative
GPS
Number of
terrestrial
nav aids
GPS+
EGNOS L1
GPS+EGNOS L1/L5
+Galileo
Robustness to
Interferences
Robustness to
Interferences
Robustness to
Interferences
system
failures
tolerance
system
failures
tolerance
system
failures
tolerance
Integrity
Integrity
Integrity
Continuity
Continuity
Continuity
Availability
Availability
Availability
Accuracy
Accuracy
Accuracy
Combined EGNOS/GALILEO Services
Long Term Vision
 Regarding aviation, latest work at ICAO GNSS-P on vulnerability:
 Concluded that “there are no vulnerability identified that can
compromise the ultimate goal of transition to GNSS as a global
system for all phases of flight”.
 Recommended, among other things, that “States, in their planning
and introduction of GNSS services, take full advantage of future
contribution of new GNSS signals and constellations in the
reduction of GNSS vulnerability”
 Latest EC/ESA work also indicates that achievement of GNSS “sole
service” for the most stringent safety of life applications requires
the combination of all GPS / EGNOS / GALILEO signals (high
robustness against vulnerability, enabling to start the process of
decommissioning of some conventional navigation aids)
 For mass market applications, combined GPS/EGNOS/GALILEO
services can also largely increase the European GNSS business
opportunities (in combination with suitable complementary
technologies, as specifically required)
EGNOS Integration (1)
EC Council Conclusions, June 2003
 EGNOS is an integral part of the European
satellite radio-navigation policy
 EGNOS to be certified for aviation use
 EGNOS to become operational asap
 EGNOS to allow for a service availability in the
long term
 EGNOS to be used as a precursor to GALILEO
and as an enabler to penetrate rapidly the
market for satellite radio-navigation services
EGNOS Integration (2)
EC Council Conclusions, June 2003
 EGNOS to be placed under GJU control:
 Supervision of EGNOS management after ORR (from 2004)
 Conclusion of an agreement with an economic operator in
charge of exploiting EGNOS from 2004
 Elaboration of recommendations concerning ownership,
intellectual property and commercial exploitation rights
 Assessment of potential inclusion of EGNOS in the GALILEO
concession agreement
 Public funding from 2004 to 2008 for maintaining EGNOS to
meet the obligations of the international standards
 Pursue determinedly the extension of EGNOS outside Europe in
order to introduce services into neighboring regions
 Appropriate (framework) agreement to be concluded between
investors and GJU for future policy decisions on EGNOS
EGNOS and GSA
Proposed GSA Council Regulation
 Article 2 – Tasks – 1.ba)
- The Authority ’’shall be entrusted with the responsibility –
inherited from the Galileo Joint Undertaking –of managing the
agreement with the economic operator charged with
operating EGNOS and of presenting a framework on the
future policy options concerning the EGNOS system, with due
regard to the opinion of those parties who contributed to the
funding of the development and deployment phases of the
EGNOS system’’
 Article 3 – Ownership
- The Authority ’’shall be the owner of all the tangible and
intangible EGNOS assets subject to agreement with the
EGNOS investors on the terms and conditions on the transfer
from ESA of ownership of all or part of the EGNOS facilities
and equipment’’