14 décembre 2023 | International, Aérospatial

Thale’s new Ground Master 400A reinforcing air surveillance and protection for the Royal Malaysian Air Force

Leveraging on years of successful field experience, GaN technology and surveillance capabilities, the GM400α detects simultaneously targets from fast jets and missiles

https://www.epicos.com/article/783813/thales-new-ground-master-400a-reinforcing-air-surveillance-and-protection-royal

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  • Army numbers smallest since WWII — what units face cuts in 2024?

    28 décembre 2023 | International, Sécurité

    Army numbers smallest since WWII — what units face cuts in 2024?

    What steps will the Army take to avoid becoming hollow?

  • Companies seek end to haggling over FCAS rights with fresh offer this week

    2 février 2021 | International, Aérospatial

    Companies seek end to haggling over FCAS rights with fresh offer this week

    By: Sebastian Sprenger COLOGNE, Germany – Airbus and Dassault executives hope to finalize their offer for the next phase of the Future Combat Air System by the end of the week, putting to rest a dispute over the handling of intellectual property rights that has been simmering between partner nations Germany, France and Spain. At issue is whether countries participating in the development of mainland Europe's futuristic weapon system are free to use the technology to make adjustments of their own later on, said German Air Force Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Ingo Gerhartz. “It should be clear that if we're developing a European system, there can be no black boxes,” he said at an virtual press conference organized by German aerospace industry association BDLI. The term “black box” refers to technology purchased as-is, with no means by customers to understand, replicate or modify it. “It must be possible to hand intellectual property rights from branch of industry to another so that it's possible for all partners to make their own developments in the future,” Gerhartz added. The tri-national FCAS program aims to replace the German Eurofighter and French Rafale fleets by 2040. As envisioned, it will consist of a next-generation manned jet and a series of drones, dubbed remote carriers, that can be tasked to work in concert on anything from reconnaissance to strike missions. Germany's Airbus and France's Dassault are the primary contractors for the program. As Europe's most ambitious weapons project ever, it is estimated to have a price tag in the hundreds of billions of euros. Spain is meant to be a full participant, with Indra as national lead, getting access to a third of the overall work share. Next up for the program is additional development work culminating in the presentation of a demonstrator aircraft and remote carriers by 2026 or 2027. Those could be simple, throw-away drones or more elaborate unmanned planes in the style of a “loyal wingman” to the human pilot, said Dirk Hoke, CEO of Airbus Defence and Space, at the same event. An agreement on intellectual property usage is needed both on the government and industry level before submitting an offer for the upcoming program stage. The idea is to find a compromise by Feb. 5, have the Berlin government submit the documentation to the Bundestag, Germany's parliament, for approval over the next few months, and get the green light to spend additional money before the summer break, Hoke said. While Airbus is used to sharing its intellectual property rights when selling to the German government, partner nations, France and Spain handle those occasions differently. “I'm confident that we can find a common solution,” Hoke said. Reinhard Brandl, a lawmaker of Bavaria's Christian Social Union who sits on the Bundestag's appropriations committee, said he shared the optimism but singled out IP rights as a continuing sticking point. “We will look at the agreement very carefully,” he said. “We don't want to see unfavorable concessions just for the sake of an agreement.” Brandl belongs to a faction of German lawmakers who fear that domestic companies could lose out in a cooperative program with France. That is especially the case, following that logic, because Airbus, as the German lead contractor, is partly French to begin with. The French, meanwhile, have at times become frustrated with Germany's piecemeal approval process for FCAS funding, a dynamic that could become even more pronounced if money gets tight as a result of the coronavirus crisis. Thomas Jarzombek, the point person for aerospace policy at the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy, said the program remains crucial for German industry, describing it as a recovery activity for companies post-COVID. “It's become even more important than before,” he said. Brandl said he still worries about spending cuts in the future, especially during development, as the defense ministry may seek opportunities for more near-term fixes to lagging readiness rates across the force. He proposed anchoring FCAS funding elsewhere in the federal government other than under the auspices of the Bundeswehr, at least until the program gets close to showing actual military utility. https://www.defensenews.com/global/europe/2021/02/01/companies-seek-end-to-haggling-over-fcas-rights-with-fresh-offer-this-week

  • L'armée américaine attribue à Airbus un contrat de soutien logistique continu

    26 mai 2022 | International, Aérospatial

    L'armée américaine attribue à Airbus un contrat de soutien logistique continu

    Airbus a signé avec l'armée américaine un contrat de soutien logistique continu (CLS) portant sur la fourniture de pièces de rechange, de matériel et de services d'ingénierie pour l'ensemble de la flotte d'hélicoptères utilitaires et d'entraînement UH-72A et UH-72 B Lakota de l'armée, soit 482 appareils. Le contrat comprend une base de six mois et 4,5 années d'option, avec une valeur totale potentielle de plus de 1,5 Md$. Airbus assurera le soutien de 67 sites Lakota aux États-Unis et à l'étranger. Il s'agit notamment de bases de la Garde nationale dans 43 États et de Fort Rucker en Alabama, où l'UH-72A effectue la mission IERW (Initial Entry Rotary Wing) de l'armée. Les Lakota, des hélicoptères légers, sont destinés à la formation des pilotes mais aussi à des missions de sécurité intérieure, et sont produits à Columbus (Mississippi, Sud) dans une usine créée par Airbus en 2003. « Airbus a fourni un produit et des services de support exceptionnels pour l'UH-72A pendant près de deux décennies », a déclaré le Colonel Calvin Lane, U.S. Army Utility Project Manager. « Ce contrat souligne la confiance de l'armée dans les capacités de l'avion, et nous nous réjouissons du soutien continu que ce contrat apporte à la flotte d'UH-72 ». Ensemble de la presse du 24 mai

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