GLAs Applaud US eLoran Decision
21 Feb 2008
Robust, reliable and high-performance positioning, navigation and timing (PNT) is the lifeblood of modern society’s critical infrastructure, affecting power systems, telecommunications, transport and finance. GPS has revolutionised PNT but it has known vulnerabilities. Galileo will have a positive impact on GPS system-level vulnerability although all satellite navigation systems share common vulnerabilities at signal and user levels.
The US decision establishes eLoran’s role as a key component of the future US PNT mix. The world’s premier satellite navigation service provider, knowing its own vulnerabilities, has done extensive analysis and has settled on eLoran as the solution.
Other satellite navigation service providers have a similar PNT mix. The Russian Federation operates its Glonass satellite navigation system and its version of eLoran, Chayka. The People’s Republic of China is developing its Compass satellite navigation system and has deployed Loran in the Far East. Now Europe needs a similar eLoran back up to complement its long awaited Galileo system.
As responsible and prudent service providers, the GLAs have long identified the need for eLoran to mitigate satellite navigation vulnerabilities. This is why the GLAs have deployed their new eLoran station in Cumbria. Together with stations in Norway, France, Germany and the Faeroe Islands, the GLAs are now providing a trial eLoran service in Northern Europe.
The GLAs argue that in determining its long term PNT mix, Europe needs a mature and rational debate about GNSS vulnerability that recognises both the benefits of having two satellite navigation systems, Galileo and GPS, as well as the benefits of system diversity based on eLoran. The GLA view is that now is the time for governments, service providers and users to demand a European Radio Navigation Plan based on Galileo, GPS and eLoran. They believe that this is the only way to establish a robust, reliable and high-performance PNT mix in Europe that will protect critical infrastructure and allow European users to retain the safety, security and economic benefits of GPS that they enjoy, even when their satellite services are disrupted.





