EASA updates standing guidance on GNSS jamming and spoofing as events spike

EASA has updated its standing guidance for industry stakeholders in response to a rapid rise in GNSS jamming and spoofing events. The revision is intended to help operators and other stakeholders manage increasing interference risks, reflecting a noted spike in occurrences.

Discovered 2026-07-04T13:28:54.713773-07:00 | 2026-07-04T13:28:54.713773-07:00

Briefing

What Hype is tracking

  • EASA’s standing guidance update signals evolving regulatory expectations as GNSS jamming and spoofing events rise sharply.
  • The agency explicitly cites a spike in occurrences, providing a fresh basis for how operators and other stakeholders should interpret and respond to navigation interference risk.
  • For compliance and operational risk management, this guidance affects the shared playbook used across the EU aviation ecosystem.

Reported By

Runway Girl
Sources Tracked
1
First Seen
2026-07-04T13:28:54.713773-07:00
Latest Update
2026-07-04T13:28:54.713773-07:00
Coverage
Aviation

Sources

Hype groups these reports into one evolving story so you can compare coverage without losing the thread.

Related Coverage