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China adds two more satellites to its homegrown GPS rival

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The Long March-3B/Yuanzheng-1 rocket carrying two satellites for the BeiDou Navigation Satellite System blasts off from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center. Province. Photo: Xinhua

China launched two new satellites into space Saturday, state media reported, as it builds a homegrown satellite navigation system to rival the US’s Global Positioning System.

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A rocket carrying the satellites was launched from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in southwestern Sichuan province at 8:29 pm (1229 GMT), the official Xinhua news agency said.

The satellites are the 18th and 19th launched by China as it develops its domestic navigation system Beidou, or Compass. They take the total number launched this year to three.

Beidou is currently centred on the Asia Pacific region but is slated to cover the whole world by 2020.

“The successful launch marks another solid step in building Beidou into a navigation system with global coverage,” the satellite launch centre was quoted by Xinhua as saying.

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Beidou -- named after the Chinese term for the plough or Big Dipper constellation -- was announced in 2012, joining the US’s GPS, Russia’s GLONASS and European Union’s Galileo.

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