Title: GPSGalileo Working Group on Trade and Civilian Applications
1GPS-Galileo Working Group on Trade and Civilian
Applications
- Briefing to U.S. IndustryU.S. Chamber of
CommerceSeptember 6, 2006
Office of Space CommercializationNational
Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationU.S.
Department of Commerce
2GPS-Galileo Agreement
- 2004 United States and European Community signed
historic agreement on GPS-Galileo cooperation,
recognizing importance of compatibility and
interoperability for all parties
- Agreed to spectrally separate signals for
military, civilian, and public regulated
services - Agreed to implement a common, open, civil signal
on both Galileo and GPS III, free of direct user
fees
June 26, 2004, press conference at U.S.-EU Summit
in Ireland (Secretary of State Colin Powell,
Irish Foreign Minister Brian Cowen, EU
Vice-President Loyola De Palacio)
3Agreement Includes Provisions To Maintain Level
Playing Field
- Recognizes existing obligations under World Trade
Organization - Most Favored Nation status for goods and services
- National treatment for goods
- Affirms nondiscriminatory approach to trade in
satellite navigation goods and services - Requires equal access to open signals and
technical information needed for receiver
development - Requires consultations on proposed measures
affecting satellite navigation use
4Working Groups EstablishedTo Continue Dialogue
- A. Compatibility Interoperability
- B. Trade Civilian Applications
- C. Next-Generation GNSS
- D. Security Issues
5Proposed Agenda Items for First Working Group B
Meeting
- Definition of nondiscriminatory approach
- EC update on Galileo concessionaire process and
business plan - U.S. questions on Galileo Interface Control
Document, intellectual property rights - EC questions on U.S. table of radio frequency
allocations - Moved from Working Group A
6Elements of U.S. Definition of Nondiscriminatory
Approach
- Manufacturers from Galileo member nations do not
receive competitive advantages in terms of lower
fees, earlier access to information, simpler
licensing processes, etc. - Galileo coalition will not seek to establish
global or regional standards through ICAO, IMO,
etc., that effectively mandate use of Galileo - Any new governmental standards, regulations, or
mandates are capabilities based instead of system
specific
7Galileo Business Plan
- U.S. remains guarded about Galileo business plan
- Not fully revealed due to concessionaire process
- Licensing, royalties on chipsets not well
understood - Fee structure for subscription services unknown
- Revenue projections seem questionable
- Galileo Joint Undertaking to issue Green Paper
on regulations, standards in late 2006 - U.S. welcomes feedback from industry on validity
of Galileo market assumptions and projections
8Interface Control Document (ICD)
- Draft ICD for Galileo signals released in 2006
- Positive step towards providing access to
technical information - However, intellectual property rights asserted in
ICD prevent commercialization of receivers until
date TBD
9Contact Information
- Office of Space CommercializationNational
Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationU.S.
Department of Commerce6822 Herbert C. Hoover
Building Washington, D.C. 20230 - space.commerce_at_noaa.gov(202) 482-6125