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Global air traffic surveillance could shorten flights

By | June 23, 2012, 7:24 AM PDT

Iridium communications is planning to put tracking devices on all of its next-generation satellites to keep tabs on all planes in the sky in real-time.

The Aireon system is a step toward replacing the current radar-based aircraft tracking systems to GPS and will give more detailed information to workers on the ground.

The company says the new system could even reduce flight times by allowing pilots to take advantage of new routes such as ones around the poles, which will conserve fuel.

Discovery News reports:

“The project builds on the ongoing effort to upgrade aircraft tracking systems from radars to GPS satellite navigation signals. Currently however, only about 10 percent of the planet has the GPS receivers to pick up an aircraft’s signals. That limits the routes airplanes can fly, particularly those crossing the oceans or flying over the planet’s poles.”

The private air traffic control company Nav Canada will be the first customer to use the new tracking system.

“Iridium said it expects to receive about $200 million from Nav Canada and other air-traffic-control organizations for installing the devices on its satellites,” Wall Street Journal reports. It also anticipates receiving fees from air-traffic-control organizations and other customers using the system.”

The new GPS system will also save the airlines money. According to project adviser Russ Chew, airlines will save “between $6 billion and $8 billion over 12 years on their north Atlantic and north and central Pacific routes.”

The FAA is also very interested in the system according to Iridium CEO Matt Desch.

Desch told Discovery News: “There won’t be any more blind spots anywhere in the world.”

Eyes in Space Could Shave Flight Times  [Discovery News]

Photo vial flickr/brianDhawkins

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Amy Kraft

About Amy Kraft

Amy Kraft was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet in 2012.

Amy Kraft

Amy Kraft

Contributing Editor

Amy Kraft is a freelance writer based in New York. She has written for New Scientist and DNAinfo and has produced podcasts for Scientific American's 60-Second-Science. She holds degrees from CUNY Graduate School of Journalism and the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Follow her on Twitter.

Amy Kraft

Amy Kraft

Amy Kraft does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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