The European Union will likely take over the Galileo satellite navigation project, which has made little progress under the direction of a consortium of private builders.
鈥淭here will be greater participation by the public sector in the construction phase of the system,鈥 said German Transport Minister Wolfgang Tiefensee, whose country holds the EU presidency until the end of next month.
He made the comments on Monday, three days before a deadline for the project鈥檚 eight private builders to sort out their differences. 鈥淚 am confident we will reach a solution on [Galileo] in June鈥, when EU transport ministers meet, he said.
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The Galileo project is meant to compete with the US Global Positioning System (GPS), a free navigation system that some fear could be turned off at the whim of the US government.
But almost two years after being named, a private consortium of industry giants 鈥 AENA, Alcatel, EADS, Finmeccanica, Hispasat, Inmarsat, TeleOp and Thales 鈥 has made little progress on the project, angering the commission (see Political infighting threatens Europe鈥檚 satnav plans).
鈥淕alileo is going through a deep and grave crisis,鈥 Tiefensee said.
He said it was probable that public funds would be used in the 鈥渃onstruction鈥 of the system while the private partners would take responsibility for the 鈥渆xploitation phase鈥.
One official has said that completely taking over Galileo would cost just less than 聙2 billion ($2.7 billion) on top of the 聙1.5 billion the European Commission already allocated in the 2007-2013 budget period.
On 16 May, EU Transport Commissioner Jacques Barrot is due to present a list of alternatives for the struggling project.
They are expected to range from totally taking over Galileo, a system of some 30 satellites which could become operational as late as 2013, partially financing the project or abandoning it altogether, officials have said.