SBAS for Africa &
Indian Ocean helicopter demonstration proves
Safety of Life (SoL) services
The Agency for Air
Navigation Safety in Africa and Madagascar
(ASECNA), Nigerian Communications Satellite Ltd.
(NIGCOMSAT) and Thales Alenia Space, the joint
venture between Thales (67%) and Leonardo (33%),
are working together to accelerate the
development of SBAS (Satellite-Based
Augmentation System) services for aviation in
Africa.
Exploiting the SBAS
signal broadcast over the Africa & Indian Ocean
(AFI) region since September 2020, including
receipt of a SBAS signal at the Optus Satellite
teleport in Western Australia in October 2020,
and delivering the first SBAS open service in
this part of the world, via the NigComSat-1R
satellite, and following up the flight
demonstrations performed successfully last
January at Lomé Gnassingbe Eyadéma International
Airport, the three partners recently
conducted a successful SBAS demonstration flight
on June 2nd 2021 between Douala and
Kribi in Cameroon with a rotorcraft.
The aim was to
demonstrate in the field the effectiveness of
this technology developed as part of the “SBAS
for Africa & Indian Ocean” programme, designed
to autonomously provide SBAS services across the
continent, thus improving the performance of the
global navigation satellite systems (GNSS), GPS
and Galileo.
The rotorcraft
demonstration carried out a low-altitude,
two-way demonstration flight along a Low-level
route linking two point-in-space (PinS)
approaches to the Douala airport and a point
near the oil platforms off the Kribi coast.
This experimental flight demonstrated the
ability of the SBAS Safety of Life (SoL)
services and efficiency, further demonstrating
Thales’s certified and proven SBAS SoL services
can be applied in complex ionospheric equatorial
zone using Thales specific algorithms developed
over the last 5 years through significant R&D
investment, and in view of the operational SBAS
services expected to be delivered in 2024. The
helicopter was provided by Heli Union and the
SBAS receiver by Pildo Labs.
The proven
application of Thales’s certified SBAS SoL
services in equatorial zones that present
challenging ionospheric conditions follows
Thales’s recent
announcement to enhance space based
positioning systems to exploit the integrity
that comes with Safety of Life services
beyond the traditional aviation certified
capability, that could deliver significant
benefit to Australia and New Zealand including,
broader industry benefits with emerging safety
critical applications such as, autonomous
vehicles, mining and resources as well as ground
transportation, maritime and rail.
“We will continue
to support and contribute to the success of SBAS
flight demonstrations using NIGCOMSAT-1R
navigation payload to sensitize stakeholders
towards acceptance and adoption of SBAS
technology in Africa’s Aviation sector for its
many benefits especially as it concerns
improvement of operational safety, reduction in
operational costs and environment”,
declared Dr. Abimbola Alale, MD/CEO of NIGCOMSAT
Ltd. “It is in line with marching order and
directive of the Honorable Minister of
Communications and Digital Economy of Federal
Republic of Nigeria; Dr. Isa Ali Ibrahim
(Pantami) FNCS, FBCS, FIIM who has directed full
exploitation of the capabilities and capacity of
NIGCOMSAT-1R satellite for digitalized economy
in all sectors for sustainable development in
the continent.”
“Thales Alenia
Space is the ideal partner to support countries
that want to implement their own SBAS system,
based on our proven expertise in developing
EGNOS for Europe and KASS for South Korea,
coupled with our advanced satellite positioning
technologies,” said Benoit Broudy, Vice
President, Navigation Business Unit at
Thales Alenia Space “This latest
demonstration proved the service's ability to
improve satellite navigation for helicopters, in
addition to civil planes, and it will help
accelerate the rollout of SBAS aeronautical
services in Africa.”
“I’m proud that
we were able to demonstrate the utility and
efficiency of SBAS services on our continent for
all the community of airspace users, from
commercial aviation to general aviation, and
including rotorcraft,” said Mohamed Moussa,
Director General of ASECNA. “In line with my
vision of unification of the African Sky, the
upcoming deployment of the ‘SBAS for Africa &
Indian Ocean’ system, the navigation solution
for Africa and by Africa, will benefit to all
the aviation stakeholders of the continent,
enhancing sustainably the flight safety and
efficiency” Commented Mohamed Moussa,
ASECNA General Director.