Introduction
BeiDou is China’s satellite navigation system. It is formally known as the BeiDou Navigation Satellite System, or BDS. Official Chinese sources describe it as a system that provides all-time, all-weather and high-accuracy positioning, navigation and timing services to global users.
Evolution of the system
BeiDou developed in three phases:
• BDS-1
• BDS-2
• BDS-3
Official interface and white-paper documents state that the construction and development of BDS were carried out in this “three-step” sequence. This phased evolution is one of the most important facts about BeiDou because it shows how China moved from a more limited regional system to a fully global one.
Global status
By the BDS-3 phase, BeiDou had become a global navigation satellite system. Official Chinese material states that BDS provides global positioning, navigation, and timing services and that BDS-3 was formally commissioned as a powerful global navigation system.
Constellation structure
BeiDou is particularly distinctive because its space segment is a hybrid constellation rather than one relying only on Medium Earth Orbit. Official Chinese documentation states that the BDS space segment uses a combination of:
• GEO satellites
• IGSO satellites
• MEO satellites
The official BDS-3 signal document further states that the nominal BDS-3 constellation consists of:
• 3 GEO satellites
• 3 IGSO satellites
• 24 MEO satellites
This mixed architecture is one of BeiDou’s most distinctive design choices and helps it strengthen service over China and the Asia-Pacific region while also maintaining global coverage.
Services
Official Chinese sources state that BeiDou provides a wide range of services beyond basic navigation. The system has been described as offering seven types of services, including positioning, navigation, and timing, and also global short message communication.
This broader service design is important because BeiDou has often been presented not merely as a navigation system but as a multi-functional infrastructure platform.
Open service and signals
BeiDou publishes interface control documents for open services and signal standards. Official open service documents indicate that the system supports regional navigation satellite services jointly through BDS-2 and BDS-3 in some service layers, while BDS-3 defines the nominal global constellation for the newer architecture.
Strategic importance
BeiDou is strategically important for China because it gives China an independent and sovereign navigation capability. Like other major GNSS constellations, it reduces dependence on foreign navigation systems for civilian infrastructure, transport, communications, and military operations. Because the system is global and hybrid in architecture, it also strengthens China’s technological reach and geopolitical influence. This is a reasoned conclusion grounded in the official framing of BDS as a national space infrastructure of major significance.
Distinctive features
BeiDou stands out for several reasons:
• it evolved through a clear three-step development path
• it uses a hybrid constellation of GEO, IGSO, and MEO satellites
• it provides not only navigation and timing but also short-message communication services
• it combines regional strength with global capability
Conclusion
BeiDou is China’s global satellite navigation system and one of the most sophisticated GNSS programmes in the world. Its phased development, hybrid constellation design, and broad service architecture make it a major instrument of Chinese technological and strategic autonomy.