|
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press
Secretary
For Immediate Release May 1, 2000
STATEMENT BY THE
PRESIDENT REGARDING THE UNITED STATES' DECISION
TO STOP DEGRADING GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM
ACCURACY
Today, I am pleased to announce
that the United States will stop the intentional
degradation of the Global Positioning System
(GPS) signals available to the public beginning
at midnight tonight. We call this degradation
feature Selective Availability (SA). This will
mean that civilian users of GPS will be able to
pinpoint locations up to ten times more
accurately than they do now. GPS is a dual-use,
satellite-based system that provides accurate
location and timing data to users worldwide. My
March 1996 Presidential Decision Directive
included in the goals for GPS to: "encourage
acceptance and integration of GPS into peaceful
civil, commercial and scientific applications
worldwide; and to encourage private sector
investment in and use of U.S. GPS technologies
and services." To meet these goals, I committed
the U.S. to discontinuing the use of SA by 2006
with an annual assessment of its continued use
beginning this year.
The decision to discontinue SA
is the latest measure in an on-going effort to
make GPS more responsive to civil and commercial
users worldwide. Last year, Vice President Gore
announced our plans to modernize GPS by adding
two new civilian signals to enhance the civil
and commercial service. This initiative is
on-track and the budget further advances
modernization by incorporating some of the new
features on up to 18 additional satellites that
are already awaiting launch or are in
production. We will continue to provide all of
these capabilities to worldwide users free of
charge.
My decision to discontinue SA
was based upon a recommendation by the Secretary
of Defense in coordination with the Departments
of State, Transportation, Commerce, the Director
of Central Intelligence, and other Executive
Branch Departments and Agencies. They realized
that worldwide transportation safety,
scientific, and commercial interests could best
be served by discontinuation of SA. Along with
our commitment to enhance GPS for peaceful
applications, my administration is committed to
preserving fully the military utility of GPS.
The decision to discontinue SA is coupled with
our continuing efforts to upgrade the military
utility of our systems that use GPS, and is
supported by threat assessments which conclude
that setting SA to zero at this time would have
minimal impact on national security.
Additionally, we have demonstrated the
capability to selectively deny GPS signals on a
regional basis when our national security is
threatened. This regional approach to denying
navigation services is consistent with the 1996
plan to discontinue the degradation of civil and
commercial GPS service globally through the SA
technique.
Originally developed by the
Department of Defense as a military system, GPS
has become a global utility. It benefits users
around the world in many different applications,
including air, road, marine, and rail
navigation, telecommunications, emergency
response, oil exploration, mining, and many
more. Civilian users will realize a dramatic
improvement in GPS accuracy with the
discontinuation of SA. For example, emergency
teams responding to a cry for help can now
determine what side of the highway they must
respond to, thereby saving precious minutes.
This increase in accuracy will allow new GPS
applications to emerge and continue to enhance
the lives of people around the world.
|