| Report on the UN/USA International Meeting on the Use and 
	Applications of Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS)Hosted by the United Nations Office for Outer Space AffairsVienna, Austria, 13 to 17 December 2004
1 Introduction This report covers the latest in a series of meetings on the use and 
	applications of Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) hosted by the 
	United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UN OOSA) and also supported 
	by the State Department of the USA. The meetings arise from recommendations 
	of the UN Committee on the Peaceful Use of Outer Space (COPUOS), as ratified 
	by the General Assembly of the UN. The author attended the 2004 meeting 
	representing the International Federation of Surveyors (FIG).  The meetings involved the key players delivering GNSS components 
	including: 
					The USA’s Global Positioning System (GPS), represented by the State 
	  Department, Department of Transport and Interagency GPS Executive Board.Russia’s GLONASS, represented by Satellite Navigation Department of 
	  the Federal Space Agency and Europe’s planned Galileo system, represented by the European 
	  Commission (EC) and European Space Agency (ESA)  A feature of the series of meetings has been a strong focus on improving 
	infrastructure and capacity building for GNSS use in developing countries 
	and countries in transition. There were delegates from many countries 
	including: Austria, Brazil, Bulgaria, Colombia, Czech Republic, Egypt, 
	Hungary, India, Italy, Japan, Kenya, Malaysia, Nigeria, Peru, Poland, 
	Romania, Russian Federation, Slovakia, South Africa, Syrian Arab Republic, 
	Ukraine, United Kingdom, United States of America and Zambia.  The global user community was also represented with major players in the 
	many application areas, including key organisations for the surveying and 
	mapping community:  
					The International Association of Geodesy (IAG) represented by the 
	  President (Gerhard Beutler) and Chair of Commission 1 on Reference 
	  Frame (Herman Drewes)The IAG’s International GPS Service (IGS), represented by the 
	  President of the Board (John Dow) and the Director of IGS Central 
	  Bureau (Ruth Neilan) based at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory)The International Cartographic Association (ICA) represented by the 
	  President (Milan Konecny)The International Federation of Surveyors (FIG) represented by the 
	  Chair of Commission 5 (the author, Matt Higgins)  Highlights for the interests of FIG and the surveying and mapping 
	community generally, can be broken into three main areas: 
					The signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) by Sergio 
	  Camacho, the Director of UN OOSA and Holger Magel, the 
	  President of FIG. That was followed by a meeting at working level to 
	  explore concrete areas of cooperation between UN OOSA and FIG.The presentations, workshops and working groups on issues related to 
	  GNSS applications, infrastructure and capacity building globally and also 
	  with a focus on the needs of developing countries and countries in 
	  transition. The establishment of an International Committee on GNSS (ICG) under 
	  the auspices of the UN, of which FIG will be a member.  These points are detailed below. The Memorandum of Understanding between FIG and UN OOSA
    			 There was a brief ceremony during the first day for the signing of a 
	Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) by Sergio Camacho, the Director of UN OOSA 
	and Holger Magel, the President of FIG. For more details, including the 
	speech drafted by me and presented by Professor Magel, see:http://www.fig.net/news/news_2004/vienna_dec_2004.htm
 The actual MoU is available at:http://www.fig.net/news/news_2004/vienna_dec_2004/un_oosa_mou.pdf
 Later in the week there was a follow up meeting at working officer level 
	to explore concrete areas of cooperation between UN OOSA and FIG. In line 
	with the MoU the three main topics discussed were: 
					Space Science and Technology education generally;GNSS education specifically and;Space Technology for Disaster Management  There is an existing set of curricula for the Regional Centres for Space 
	Science and Technology Education in 4 topics (I have a CD – they are in 
	English, French and Spanish). 
					Satellite communicationsSatellite meteorology and global climateSpace and atmospheric scienceRemote sensing and the geographic information systems 
					 It was decided to form a sub-group to investigate the development of a 
	new curriculum on GNSS. It was also decided that the sub-group will review 
	the GNSS content in the existing 4 curricula. The group will be co-chaired 
	by Naser El-Sheimy (for FIG) and Prof Lo-Presti from Italy. 
	This topic area is quite specific to Commission 5 content so we are happy to 
	pursue this but there is also a need to discuss this with Chair of FIG 
	Commission 2 on Education. The co-chairs of the sub-group are confident that 
	they can fund most of their involvement out of their Universities. However, 
	this work was put up as a project during the Workshop processes and UN OOSA 
	is confident that it can find funds to assist with this process.  We also discussed Space Technology for Disaster Management. 
				David 
	Stevens from OOSA oversees this topic and will contact Theo Kötter 
    to explore potential synergy between his work and the work of Theo’s FIG WG 
	on Disaster Management. A specific action for Commission 5 is to investigate 
	development of a simple guideline on the use of GNSS by people responding to 
	natural disaster situations (eg for people from UN agencies using handheld 
	GPS Receivers, maps etc when responding to an earth quake or tsunami). The Presentations, Workshops and Working Group Meetings 
				 The objectives of this part of the Meeting were: 
					Review progress made in implementing the recommendations of the 
	  International Workshop, held in Vienna in December 2003;Review status of follow-up projects and potential ways and means to 
	  carry them forward in 2005 and beyond;Review any follow-up initiatives and actions resulting from the series 
	  of UN/USA Regional Workshops on GNSS;Review specific recommendations of the Action Team on GNSS and 
	  possible ways and means to implement them in 2005 and beyond.  There were many presentations on the latest status of GPS Modernization, 
	GLONASS revitalisation and development of Galileo, the various augmentation 
	systems around the world and key user organisations, including President of 
	IAG and my presentation on behalf of FIG. There were also many presentations 
	on GNSS applications issues in developing countries. I will not go into the 
	details of these presentations here but readers are pointed to the UN OOSA 
	web site, where these presentations are freely available, see:
    			http://www.oosa.unvienna.org/SAP/act2004/vienna/presentations/  
				 For FIG, a major issue from the Workshops and Working Group is to support 
	development of geodetic reference frames (especially in Developing 
	Countries) that are compatible with GNSS. The major priority here is for the 
	African content through the existing IAG project known as AFREF. Through 
	discussions I offered for FIG to host a meeting in Cairo of the AFREF 
	Steering Committee and to also convene related technical sessions and 
	perhaps a panel discussion. The FIG Working Week in Cairo is joint with 
	GSDI8 so it is especially attractive for the AFREF project to get exposure 
	to decision makers from GSDI. This has become an example of good cooperation 
	between FIG, IAG and a regional project. The International Committee on GNSS (ICG)  The third major development during the week was to work towards the final 
	terms of reference for the establishment of an International Committee on 
	GNSS (ICG) under the auspices of the UN. I have a seat on the ICG for FIG.
    			 With GPS Modernization, GLONASS revitalisation and Galileo all happening 
	in the next 5 years it is very important that FIG has strong involvement in 
	the decision making processes about these systems and the ICG is becoming 
	the forum for such discussions. This meeting saw the key players from the 
	Workshop (eg USA, Russia and EU), giving strong support for the formation of 
	the ICG and importantly there was also representation from the Space 
	Agencies of China, India, Japan and Canada.  The forming members of the ICG are invited to another meeting in Vienna 
	in March 2005 to finalize the Terms of Reference. A detailed proposal on the 
	official formation of the ICG can then go to the UN Committee on the 
	Peaceful Use of Outer Space (COPUOS).  Matt HigginsChair of Commission 5 of the International Federation of Surveyors and
 Senior Surveyor Department of Natural Resources and Mines,
 Queensland Government, Australia
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