The fire at an electrical substation that shut down London’s Heathrow Airport, Europe’s busiest hub, for 18 hours on March 21 was one of many periodic reminders of the vulnerability of much of our critical infrastructure to a single point of failure (SPOF). A previous one was the CrowdStrike software bug that disrupted hospitals, airlines, banks and scores of other businesses and services around the world on July 19, 2024. Think of the impact on your home or business if the power went out for hours or days, and you did not have a backup generator and/or solar panels.
<p>Our society’s and economy’s enormous reliance on global navigation satellite systems (GNSS) for positioning, navigation and timing (PNT) makes GNSS a huge SPOF. Hence repeated and urgent calls for increasing the resilience of GNSS and for developing complementary and/or alternative sources of PNT (or, to use the mantra of the National Space-Based Positioning, Navigation and Timing Advisory Board in recent years, to “protect, toughen and augment” GNSS).</p> <p>Yet, at least two existing directives for strengthening PNT have not been implemented: The National Timing Resilience and Security Act of 2018 directed the U.S. Department of Transportation to ensure establishment of at least one terrestrial timing system as a backup for GPS signals, and President Trump’s January 2021 Space Policy Directive 7 ordered the entire U.S. government to “identify and implement … alternative sources of PNT for critical infrastructure, key resources and mission-essential functions.”</p> <p>Awareness of the key importance and vulnerabilities of GNSS and of the urgent need to develop complementary and/or alternative technologies has reached the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC). It dedicated its March 27 open meeting to hearing recommendations on “promoting the development of PNT technologies and solutions,” which it deems “crucial for national security, public safety and economic stability.”</p> <p>The Notice of Inquiry (NOI) that the FCC issued in preparation for the meeting is a thorough and very useful compilation of relevant policies, programs, initiatives, reports and policy documents. I highly recommend reading it. Clearly, the commission did its homework — in the footnotes, it cited four GPS World articles among its sources — and demonstrated that it understands the key challenges for GNSS, the options for complementary/alternative systems and the relevant policy history. (See Dana Goward’s March 7 article on this at gpsworld.com/fcc-to-meet-on-gps-alternatives/) The NOI also posed 94 questions to which the FCC seeks answers.</p> <p>The FCC meeting, available on YouTube, was of great importance to the whole GNSS/PNT community. While the commissioners did not vote to support any existing or proposed PNT system, they engaged in a broad discussion of the issues and heard petitions from NextNav and the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) related to the provision of nationwide PNT services. NextNav requested spectrum for its project to work with telecom providers. NAB sought to accelerate and mandate implementation of the new ATSC 3.0 television broadcast format, which includes signals for its Broadcast Positioning System.</p> <p><p>The post <a target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.gpsworld.com/fcc-meets-to-strengthen-pnt/">FCC meets to strengthen PNT</a> first appeared on <a target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="https://www.gpsworld.com">GPS World</a>.</p></p>