GNSS milestone achieved as ICAO Council adopts new dual-frequency multi-constellation standards
The International Civil Aviation Organisation has achieved a major milestone in the global standardization and roll-out of new dual-frequency multi-constellation (DFMC) capabilities for international aviation’s Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS).
Announcing this great achievement during the week, the ICAO Council President, Salvatore Sciacchitano emphasized that the milestone achieved so far in GNSS and ongoing permutations around it are aimed at improving safety, efficiency and sustainability of international air transport.
“This is an important development toward improving the safety, efficiency and sustainability of international air transport through more precise airspace management and more efficient routes and procedures.
“Eventually these new standards will provide international aviation with access to an extensive global infrastructure and over 50 new GNSS satellites,” said Sciacchitano.
He explained that DFMC GNSS permits the combined leveraging of dual frequency signals from up to four GNSS constellations simultaneously, including the GPS system (United States), Galileo (European Union), GLONASS (Russian Federation), and BeiDou (China).
According to him, the capability has been enabled through latest advances in aircraft-, satellite-, and ground-based augmentation systems, and will become more prevalent as aircraft become increasingly equipped with DMFC-capable avionics.
Currently, global aviation GNSS capabilities rely mainly on just one constellation and one frequency via GPS L1, meaning that the new multi-constellation capability will assure greater system accuracy and redundancy, delivering important air network capacity and safety benefits.
“ICAO has worked in close cooperation with EUROCAE and the RTCA on the development of these new standards, to ensure that they fully align with industry specifications,” commented ICAO Secretary General Juan Carlos Salazar.
“These types of partnerships are very cost-effective while improving end-results, and by managing the overall process through the ICAO Navigation Systems Panel, it means that the global constellations now being operated by individual States and the European Union, will be able to be confidently embraced and benefited from by the many other countries in our global network.”