United Nations/United States of America International
Workshop on the Use and Applications of Global Navigation Satellite
Systems 8-12 December 2003, Vienna, Austria
This report in .pdf-format
The Workshop Programme and Presentations are available at:
http://www.oosa.unvienna.org/SAP/gnss/joint2003/presentations/index.html
1. Introduction
The United Nations/USA International Workshop on the Use and Applications
of Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) was held from 8 to 12 December
2003 at the United Nations Office at Vienna, Austria. This report draws
heavily on the Summary Report produced by staff of the UN Office for Outer
Space Affairs (UN OOSA).
The event was convened as a Joint Meeting of the UN Action Team on GNSS
and GNSS experts who attended UN/USA Regional Workshops and the
International Meeting held in 2001 and 2002. Matt Higgins, Chair of
FIG Commission 5 attended representing FIG as a member of the UN Action
Team.
The Workshop was attended by 75 participants from 29 countries and 9
international organizations (International Telecommunication Union (ITU),
European Commission, European Space Agency (ESA), Bureau International des
Poids et Mesures (BIPM), International Association of Geodesy (IAG),
International Cartographic Association (ICA), FIG, International GPS Service
(IGS) and the UN OOSA.
2. Presentations
The Workshop was briefed on the latest developments with Global
Positioning System (GPS USA), Glonass (Russia), Galileo (European Union),
and the major GNSS augmentation systems such as EGNOS, GAGAN and Japanese
GNSS augmentations, as well as the GPS-Galileo negotiations.
The Workshop heard presentations on regional geodetic reference frame
initiatives such as AFREF (Africa), SIRGAS (South America) and EUPOS (the
proposed RTK/DGPS service in Eastern Europe).
There was a series of presentations on initiatives at national level to
coordinate GNSS activities that might provide models for other countries to
consider. Countries presented included; Slovakia, Colombia; Hungary; Italy,
Romania, Poland and work by Nigeria to develop its own satellite navigation
payload for SBAS for the benefit of Africa. Matt Higgins made a presentation
on behalf of the Australian GNSS Coordination Committee (AGCC). The Workshop
stressed the importance of supporting the efforts, particularly in
developing countries, to establish national coordination mechanisms to
promote and support the use and applications of GNSS.
The Workshop considered results from the series of UN/USA Regional
Workshop and International Meeting held in 2001-2002; grouped in the
following 5 areas:
- Surveying, mapping and Earth sciences;
- Agriculture and management of natural resources,
- Management of environment and natural disasters;
- Transportation;
- Education, training and implementation.
The Workshop established working groups to address those five thematic
areas and undertake the following tasks:
- identify any initiatives or follow-up actions undertaken to date
- identify any outstanding recommendations and suggest the way forward
- identify recommendations requiring assistance from the Office for
Outer Space Affairs in 2004-2005 and prioritize those recommendations.
The working groups met (intermingled with sessions with relevant
presentations) from 9 to 11 December.
3. Results of the Working Group on Surveying, Mapping and Earth Sciences
István Fejes (Hungary) chaired the working group with
William
Martínez-Díaz (Colombia), Chee Hua Teng (Malaysia), Reynold
Moyo (Zambia) and Ruth Neilan (International GPS Service) as
vice-chairs. Experts from 15 countries and 4 international organizations
(including FIG) participated in the working group.
The working group made 12 recommendations, which were grouped into 3
categories, i.e. projects, standards and general policy.
The working group noted that GPS-based ground geodetic networks
(infrastructures) were among the backbones and basic preconditions of most
GNSS applications, not only in the area of surveying, mapping, earth
sciences, but also in the areas of transport, environmental protection,
agriculture and others. The working group, therefore, strongly recommended
initiatives to develop such infrastructures. In this context, the working
group recommended that the AFREF project in Africa, the EUPOS project in
Central and Eastern Europe, the SIRGAS project in South America and the
APRGP project in the Asia-Pacific region should be supported.
The working group stressed the importance of the application of global
standards in the area of Spatial Data Infrastructure. The working group
recommended that all regional and national geodetic datums should be tied to
the International Terrestrial Reference Frame (ITRF). The working group
urged measures to protect GNSS frequency bands from harmful interference.
The working group also considered it important to provide support for
developments of precise geoid models in order to assist unification of
leveling networks by GNSS.
The working group also considered some cross-cutting issues, including
the need to support establishment of national or regional institutional
frameworks for coordination, planning and applications of GNSS. The working
group recommended that governments should support the development of GNSS
ground-based infrastructures at national level. The working group also
suggested eight actions that could be implemented by the Office for Outer
Space Affairs in the next two years.
4. Follow-up to the recommendations of the working groups: next steps
To facilitate follow-up actions and exchange of information, it was
agreed that OOSA would establish a web site for the Workshop. That web site
would include: all presentations; reports of the working groups, including
all proposals and recommendations; list of potential funding sources to be
identified; and major international and regional policies that indicate
priorities of the international community or region.
Participants of the Workshop will work more on outlines of the proposed
projects and activities with a view to presenting them to potential funding
sources.
Between December 2003 and February 2004, OOSA will review and evaluate
the proposals submitted by the working groups and develop a work plan for
initiatives that it could support in 2004 and 2005. OOSA aims to circulate
the work plan by the beginning of March 2004.
It was proposed that OOSA should also invite developing countries to
establish an entity at national or regional level to coordinate GNSS
activities in order to promote GNSS applications through inter-institutional
arrangements, building upon the efforts and investment made by various
sectors of economy of the countries.
5. Meeting of the UN Action Team on GNSS
Parallel and intermingled with the above was work by the UN Action Team.
It held two informal meetings, on 9 and 10 December, to discuss draft terms
of reference of the International Committee on GNSS. Matt Higgins is a
member of the Action Team, representing FIG.
The Action Team held its eighth plenary meeting on 11 December; presided
over by the co-chairs, K. Hodgkins (United States) and M. Caporale
(Italy). The meeting considered the following documents:
- Revised full report;
- Summary version of the report;
- Inputs for the report of the Committee on Peaceful of Outer Space
(COPUOS) to go to the UN General Assembly for its UNISPACE III+5 review in
2004;
- Draft terms of reference of the International Committee on GNSS.
The Action Team agreed to include the following countries and
organizations in its membership: Egypt, Nigeria, Romania, Zambia,
International Association of Geodesy (IAG) and International Cartographic
Association (ICA).
The Action Team agreed on the following action items:
- The full report will be revised and circulated to the members of the
Action Team by early February.
- The co-chairs will revise the short version of the report on the basis
of comments received during the meeting and submit it to the Scientific
and Technical Subcommittee in time for its 41st session (16-27 February
2004).
- The co-chairs will prepare a clean copy of the draft terms of
reference as amended by the Action Team and circulate it to all members.
- The first meeting of the International Committee on GNSS could be held
on the margins of the next UN/USA International Workshop on GNSS,
currently planned in December 2004 at Vienna.
- The Action Team will meet on the margin of the 41st session of the
Scientific and Technical Subcommittee.
6. Additional Comments from the Workshop
In addition to the above report on the Workshop, Matt Higgins has the
following specific comments from his perspective as FIG representative.
- The major outcome from the week was the proposal for the establishment
of the International Committee on GNSS (ICG) under the auspices of the UN
(through OOSA). It should be noted that there will now be discussions back
in the jurisdictions of the major players (USA, Russia and EU) about
issues associated with forming the ICG. It is likely that there will be
some politics to follow but hopefully the concept of the ICG will be seen
as valuable and it will come to fruition. For the first time in the more
than 40 years history of GNSS, the ICG will allow organised, global input
by civilians. The involvement of IGS, FIG, IAG and ICA, is a significant
recognition of the importance of GNSS users in the Surveying, Mapping and
Earth Sciences community. As a community, we need to take advantage of
this opportunity.
- The report of the Action Team is very broad ranging and documents many
GNSS applications, issues and coordination mechanisms across many
countries. It also documents the current situation with the 3 GNSS systems
and several augmentation systems. As such, the report will be a useful
document for everyone interested in GNSS. The related presentations are
also useful.
- It was gratifying to see the recognition by all Working Groups that
geodetic reference frame is a significant infrastructure issue for all
GNSS users.
- The UN deliberately involved people from developing countries in this
process (including from many Surveying and Mapping organisations). This
proved very beneficial in ensuring the recommendations really did address
the needs of developing countries. Also, in working sessions, people from
developing countries worked directly with office bearers in relevant
international organisations, which was of benefit to both parties.
- Civilian input to GPS development can occur through the Civil GPS
Interface Committee and that has an established mechanism for input by the
Surveying and Mapping community. Since the Workshop in Vienna Matt Higgins
has had email conversations with the Glonass and Galileo representatives
about equivalent mechanisms for their systems. He thinks any coordination
of input to the IGC from our community should also recognise these
uni-lateral mechanisms.
Matt Higgins Chair, FIG Commission 5 January 23, 2004 |