The Ministry of Defence has awarded a GBP 6 million contract to QinetiQ-led Team Elaris to develop a deployable solution concept for enhanced Long-Range Navigation, an alternative to satellite-based positioning systems that can continue to function when GPS signals are jammed or spoofed by adversaries, according to QinetiQ.

The two-year Urgent Compass programme will be used to inform future demonstration, production and deployment packages of work. Enhanced Long-Range Navigation, known as eLoran, is a terrestrially based system that provides an alternative to global navigation satellite systems in contested environments where adversaries may attempt to deny or degrade satellite signals.

A jammed or spoofed satellite navigation signal, if undetected or uncorrected, can result in misdirected troop movements or incorrectly guided missile trajectories, leading to mission failure.

Team Elaris is made up of QinetiQ, UrsaNav, Roke and GMV, with each organisation bringing technical knowledge and domain expertise in position, navigation and timing technologies to the partnership. The programme will explore both deployable and fixed eLoran solutions, with a particular focus on systems that can be quickly deployed into contested locations worldwide.

Minister for Defence Readiness and Industry Luke Pollard said the investment would boost the armed forces’ resilience on the battlefield by “developing technology to protect them, ensuring that they can continue vital operations protecting UK citizens and allies around the world.” He described the contract as “our Defence Industrial Strategy in action”, saying the government was “backing innovative technology companies, boosting defence skills and strengthening supply chains, making defence an engine for growth across the UK.”

Steve Wadey, Group CEO of QinetiQ, said the award brought together Team Elaris’ decades of advanced navigation experience and built on existing work to deliver alternative navigation solutions, adding that the team’s expertise in eLoran systems would “support the UK Government’s requirements for resilient position, navigation and timing capabilities to help protect the UK from adversaries seeking to undermine this critical service.”

The Urgent Compass programme extends QinetiQ’s existing engagement with the MoD on assured position, navigation and timing solutions, which also includes the Robust Global Navigation System programme, another component of the MoD’s approach to resilient navigation.

11 COMMENTS

    • In the end the quantum clock is a massively expensive bit of kit that’s a good 30kgs and needs a couple or square feet and costly..

      This looks they are after a small cheaper option for land use..

      In the end the RNs quantum clock is essentially about a SSBN being independent of drift issues for a couple of months.. that’s a massively different issue than managing a few days or so bit of drift your looking at on a land based system.

      • So this is just a slightly better inertial navigation system for vehicles and missiles?
        Getting the quantum stuff deployable on subs and aircraft is surely the main priority.

        • It’s a massively better inertial navigation system, orders of magnitude improvement with supposedly zero-drift.

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      • I know they’re trialling Infleqtion’s Tiqker aboard XV Excalibur at the moment. That fits into a 3U rack.

        • Yep he’s about 30kgs and just under 2 foot square.. good for Even a small water vessel.. but a bit big for a system on a small UAV or for the infantry.

          It could work well for long range fires etc as they have a big logistical train anyway and adding a 2 foot square box to a command vehicle of a battery would be a none issue..

          I suspect this project is about making the tec smaller, cheaper and easy to deploy into the battlefield.

  1. Wasn’t it called TACAN? I’m sure the new stuff will be better but I did think when it was it was terminated it was not a good strategic move to depend on GPS. Maybe we need to get Long Wave transmitting line too! The Droitwich transmitter was shut down last year. But the aerials are still there. We may end up depending on Ham Radio 📡

  2. Wasn’t it called TACAN? I’m sure the new stuff will be better but I did think when it was it was terminated it was not a good strategic move to depend on GPS. Maybe we need to get Long Wave transmitting line too! The Droitwich transmitter was shut down last year. But the aerials are still there. We may end up depending on Ham Radio 📡

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