Aviation, maritime and telecoms agencies raise alarm over increase in jamming and spoofing of satellite navigation systems.
UN Agencies ITU, ICAO, and IMO have expressed their “grave concern” over increase in jamming and spoofing of satellite navigation systems.
Increasing incidents of interference with aviation, maritime and other satellite telecommunications services mean States need to urgently enhance their protection of a critical radio-frequency band, the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), and International Maritime Organization (IMO) said with “grave concern” in a joint statement.
These cases of harmful interference are in the form of jamming and spoofing that disrupt Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) operating in the frequency bands allocated to the Radio Navigation Satellite Service (RNSS).
The joint statement, signed by the Secretaries-General of the three UN specialized agencies, identifies five key actions required from Member States:
Protection of RNSS from harmful interference affecting civilian and humanitarian operations.
Strengthening resilience of RNSS-dependent navigation, positioning, and timing systems.
Maintaining conventional navigation infrastructure for contingency support.
Enhancing collaboration between regulatory, aviation, maritime, defense, and enforcement authorities.