New $2.2 billion
Anglo-French FCAS phase announced
08
ARCH, 2016 - BY: BETH
STEVENSON - LONDON
France and the UK
are set to launch a new project under their Future Combat Air System (FCAS)
effort that will see unmanned air vehicle prototypes developed under a newly
announced £1.54 billion ($2.19 billion) agreement.
UK Prime Minister David Cameron
and French President Francois Hollande met in Amiens, France on 3 March, during
which they committed funding to build on the programme’s two-year £120 million
($170 million) feasibility study phase, that kicked off in November 2014.
The study is expected to conclude
in late 2016, and the development of full-scale prototypes is expected to start
the following year.
“We are now looking to
transition to the next phase in 2017, which will prepare for the full-scale
development of unmanned combat air system (UCAS) operational demonstrators by
2025,” the governments say.
“This demonstration programme,
the most advanced of its kind in Europe, will be centred on a versatile UCAS
platform that could serve as the basis for a future operational capability
beyond 2030.”
The governments intend to invest
$2.2 billion in the next stage of the effort and a technical review will be
carried out some time around 2020.
“In addition, we will strengthen
our collaboration by working together to analyse the future combat air
environment, including how manned and unmanned systems might operate together,”
they add.
The parties involved in the
development are split between British and French industry, and include: BAE
Systems, Dassault, Finmeccanica Airborne and Space Systems, Rolls-Royce,
Snecma/Safran and Thales.
The two leaders also signed an
agreement for France to explore the purchase of the MBDA Dual-Mode Brimstone 2
missile for its Airbus Helicopters Tiger attack rotorcraft.
Brimstone is used by UK forces
in Iraq and Syria, and “would offer a valuable upgrade to the French arsenal”,
according to the UK Ministry of Defence.
The March meeting resulted in
Cameron and Hollande signing an agreement to begin a joint concept phase for
the Future Cruise/Anti-Ship Weapon programme to develop replacements for the
MBDA Scalp/Storm Shadow missiles that both countries operate, plus the Harpoon
for the UK and Exocet for France.
This concept phase would lead to
a decision on replacements by 2020, and it is planned for an arrangement for
this to be agreed on by the end of 2016, and for contracts to possibly be
signed by March 2017.
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