London, United Kingdom, 08 July 2014

CGI will develop the Galileo Commercial Service Demonstrator core platform as part of a Pan-European consortium

CGI (NYSE: GIB) (TSX: GIB.A) has been awarded a contract to build the core infrastructure for the first demonstrator for the Galileo Commercial Service, part of the emerging European Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS). The contract was awarded by the European Commission Directorate General for Enterprise and Industry (DG ENTR). When operational, Galileo satellites will take satellite navigation to a whole new level. Users will be able to rely on the service for their most critical positioning applications, especially when used in conjunction with other systems, such as GPS. It will be especially useful in urban areas, on mountains and at high latitudes where GPS-only coverage can be intermittent.

The demonstrator application will show how Galileo can provide positioning services that are accurate to the centimetre, as well as its innovative position-authentication services could lead to further commercial uses. Once complete, the demonstrator will be made available to other GNSS service providers to test across vertical markets, including transport, insurance and personal mobility.

The Galileo Commercial Service was introduced with the goal of creating a potential revenue source to support the future maintenance of EU satellite navigation services. It provides added value to the Galileo Open Service with the expectation that new services will be based on its encrypted and guaranteed signal, which delivers a higher data throughput rate and increased positioning accuracy.

“The Commercial Service has many added benefits beyond its original designation as a potential revenue source for the Galileo system,” said Steve Smart, vice president of Space, Defence and National Security at CGI in the UK. “It will maximise the program’s ability to provide the best navigation services possible to the public and commercial sectors, and will create economic value for the EU in general. We are proud to say we are playing a key role in this innovative process.”

The European Commission DG ENTR is working in partnership with the European GNSS Agency (GSA) and the European Space Agency, in collaboration with member states. The objective is to provide the operational Commercial Service, and its associated exploitation model, in the following years. CGI has a long track record of supporting the European space industry, which includes having delivered the Constellation Control Facility that controls Galileo’s 30 satellites, as well as developing software that underpins the missions of more than 200 individual satellites.

About CGI

Founded in 1976, CGI Group Inc. is the fifth largest independent information technology and business process services firm in the world. Approximately 68,000 professionals serve thousands of global clients from offices and delivery centers across the Americas, Europe and Asia Pacific, leveraging a comprehensive portfolio of services including high-end business and IT consulting, systems integration, application development and maintenance, infrastructure management as well as a wide range of proprietary solutions. With annual revenue in excess of C$10 billion and an order backlog exceeding C$19 billion, CGI shares are listed on the TSX (GIB.A) and the NYSE (GIB). Website: www.cgi.com

For more information:

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Lorne Gorber
Senior Vice-President, Global Communications and
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lorne.gorber@cgi.com
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Jenny Thorpe
UK external communications
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