Galileo Second Generation
enters full development phase
The main procurements batch of
Galileo Second Generation initiated last summer has
been finalised, leaving the system ready for its In
Orbit Validation development phase. Today, following
the opening session of the European Navigation
Conference (ENC), ESA Director of Navigation Javier
Benedicto invited Thales Alenia Space (Italy),
Airbus Defence and Space (Germany) and Thales Six
GTS (France) to sign the respective contracts
commencing System Engineering Support for the next
generation of Europe’s navigation satellite system.
Thales Galileo Second
Generation satellites
Today, with 28 satellites in
orbit, Galileo is the world’s most precise satellite
navigation system, providing metre-level accuracy to
more than four billion users around the globe. There
are currently 10 further Galileo satellites due to
be launched, after which the first of the Galileo
Second Generation (G2) satellites with enhanced
capabilities are expected to begin joining the
constellation later in the coming years.
Satellite-building contracts
have already been awarded in May 2021 to Thales
Alenia Space (Italy) and Airbus Defence & Space
(Germany) to create two independent families of
satellites amounting to 12 G2 satellites in total,
as well as separate contracts with Safran
Electronics & Defence - Navigation & Timing (France)
and Leonardo (Italy) covering the ultra-precise
atomic clocks carried aboard.
Airbus Galileo Second
Generation satellites
Following a new procurement
batch in summer 2022, all of the other fundamental
building blocks for Galileo Second Generation are
now ready to be built with European industry, such
as the system testbeds, its ground segment and
engineering support.
ESA, acting on behalf of the
European Union Agency for the Space Programme
(EUSPA) as Galileo’s design authority and system
development prime, has in recent months awarded up
to one billion Euros in contracts, which bring the
overall commitment in Galileo Second Generation
close to three billion Euros in this Financial
Framework.
Signing of Galileo Second
Generation contracts
With the European satnav
community gathering at ESA’s ESTEC in the
Netherlands for the annual edition of the European
Navigation Conference (ENC), this year hosted by the
Netherlands Institute of Navigation (NIN) around the
theme of resilience, ESA provided an update during
yesterday's opening session on the development of
Galileo Second Generation and invited all industrial
partners that act as Primes in G2 activities: Thales
Alenia Space (Italy), Airbus Defence & Space
(Germany), GMV (Spain), Thales Alenia Space
(France), Thales Six GTS (France), Tecnobit (Spain),
Leonardo (Italy) and Safran Electronics & Defence –
Navigation & Timing (France).
Finally, Thales Alenia Space
(Italy), Airbus Defence & Space (Germany) and Thales
Six GTS (France) representatives were present to
sign four contracts for system engineering and
technical assistance (SETA), gathering key European
experts to provide assistance to ESA in its role as
system prime in areas such as Engineering, Signal
and Performance, Assembly Integrity and Verification
and Security and PRS.
Javier Benedicto, ESA Director
of Navigation
The industrial family is now
almost complete, with still two contracts for
Security Chain and PRS System Test Bed to be awarded
in the next weeks.
Javier Benedicto, ESA Director
of Navigation, comments: “Galileo has always been
intended as a permanent resource benefiting the
lives of European and world citizens, and Galileo
Second Generation will ensure the system goes
forward into the future with novel capabilities and
additional robustness, to ensure that Galileo
services are available and reliable wherever and
whenever they are needed.”
Ennio Guarino, ESA's Head of
Galileo and EGNOS Programmes Department, stated:
“The state-of-the-art G2 satellites will represent a
major step forward on what has gone before and will
incorporate numerous technology upgrades, developed
through EU and ESA research and development
programmes H2020 and Horizon Europe.”
European Navigation Conference
Employing electric propulsion
for the first time, and hosting a higher-strength
navigation antenna, the satellites will incorporate
six (rather than four) enhanced atomic clocks as
well as inter-satellite links, allowing them to
communicate and cross-check with one another. They
will be controllable with an increased data rate to
and from the ground and will operate for 15 years in
orbit.
In addition, G2’s fully digital
payloads are being designed to be easily
reconfigured in orbit, enabling them to actively
respond to the evolving needs of users with novel
signals and services.
Miguel Manteiga Bautista, ESA
Head of Galileo Second Generation, highlighted
during the ENC opening session the advantages of the
future Galileo generation: “As
part of the overall Galileo programme, G2 aims to
ensure both the long-term provision of Galileo
legacy services that more than four billion people
around the globe have come to rely on and the
exponential evolution of Galileo activities in the
coming years, fostering the leading role of European
industry across the positioning, navigation, and
timing sector.”
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