Hardware and Software Alternatives to Expediate Cross-referenced Information and Insight Delivery
For more than 40 years, global positioning system (GPS) has been the main source of continuous and real-time position, navigation, and timing (PNT) information for more than 40 years. Today, numerous industries depend on this type of information, and the defense sector is no exception.
In this study, the analyst provides an overview and a 5-year forecast of the US Department of Defense’s (DoD’s) spending on GPS and PNT technologies, highlighting key growth drivers, restraints, and opportunities. The study also outlines the Department’s most relevant contracts as well as some up-and-coming companies. Among the industry’s most persistent challenges are jamming and spoofing risks, GPS/PNT being a low priority for the government, and PNT data leaks to adversaries.
The DoD is looking into alternative PNT sources to satisfy mission requirements, regardless of threat environments, and conducting missions in GPS-denied areas. The Joint All-Domain Command and Control Strategy (JADC2) will accelerate the development of these alternatives.
Table of Contents
1. Strategic Imperatives
- Why is it Increasingly Difficult to Grow?
- The Strategic Imperative 8™
- The Impact of the Top 3 Strategic Imperatives on the GPS/PNT Industry
- Growth Opportunities Fuel the Growth Pipeline Engine™
2. Growth Opportunity Analysis
- Research Scope
- Definitions
- Trends and Challenges
- Growth Drivers
- Growth Restraints
- Important Application Areas
- Representative Contracts
- Spending Forecast
- Forecast Analysis
- Companies to Watch
- United Nations Sustainable Development Goals Related to GPS
3. US DoD GPS/Navigation/PNT
- Growth Opportunity 1: Magnetic Navigation
- Growth Opportunity 2: Celestial Navigation
- Growth Opportunity 3: Radiofrequency Positioning
- Conclusions and Future Outlook
- List of Exhibits
- Legal Disclaimer