Off the wire
Indonesia mulls postponement of weaponry purchase amid death row with Brazil  • China's catering sector picks up after austerity adjustment  • Indonesian gov't responds sharply to Australia's statement over tsunami aid  • Egypt dissolves 169 Muslim Brotherhood NGOs  • Roundup: Nikkei climbs 0.73 pct on hopes for Greece extension deal  • Roundup: Final session of South Sudan peace talks launched in Ethiopia's capital  • China completes fishery survey in South China Sea  • Liverpool FC spreads its wings across new Asian regions  • Indian stocks close lower  • Suspected norovirus outbreak sickens 120 people in Taiwan  
You are here:   Home

China's Beidou gets infrastructure boost on Qinghai-Tibet plateau

Xinhua, February 23, 2015 Adjust font size:

Precision service infrastructure for China's Beidou satellite navigation system will be built on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau as part of efforts to create a nationwide base station network for high precision navigation and positioning by 2018.

The infrastructure will be built in Qinghai's Xining, the provincial capital, and Haidong City, said an official with the First Institute of Surveying and Mapping of Qinghai on Monday.

He did not give more details about the project in Qinghai.

The infrastructure is critical to practical navigation and includes base station networks, data processing, broadcasting systems and user terminals, which together will help provide more precision services.

Beidou is the Chinese equivalent of the U.S. NAVSTAR Global Positioning System and Russia's Global Navigation Satellite System. Currently, Beidou owns 20 satellites.

The system began to provide precision positioning, real-time navigation, location reporting, precise time reading and short message services for users in China and the Asia-Pacific in December 2012. The government aims to make it a global system by 2020. Endi