Russia Unable To Reject Foreign Parts in GLONASS Satellites



by Staff Writers



Moscow (RIA Novosti) Sep 22, 2014



GLONASS is not yet as accurate in geopositioning as GPS but the Russian Space Agency promised to increase its accuracy in 2014 to less than 1 meter, thus making GLONASS and GPS parameters roughly comparable.

Refusing "everything foreign" in the production of GLONASS navigation satellites is not possible yet, Russian Space Systems Deputy Director Grigory Stupak said at the International School on Satellite Navigation.

"Import substitution will certainly be associated with the correction of the design documentation. We are not ready at the moment to refuse foreign [parts] in some cases. The missing components, of course, need to be compensated by reliable suppliers," Stupak said.

Under Western sanctions, Russia will be ordering microelectronics and machines for rocket and space equipment from China, South Korea and other Asian countries, Russia's United Rocket and Space Corporation head Igor Komarov stated earlier.

The GLONASS network, which was put into operation in 1993, is considered to be Russia's answer to the United States Global Positioning System (GPS). The network provides real-time positioning and speed data for surface, sea and airborne objects.

GLONASS is not yet as accurate in geopositioning as GPS but the Russian Space Agency promised to increase its accuracy in 2014 to less than 1 meter, thus making GLONASS and GPS parameters roughly comparable.