Russia to Replace
Helicopters in Arctic by Drones
A Russian
Mi-17 in the Arctic
Russian defense firm Rostec is partnering with Aeroxo, a small
startup based in Moscow and Riga, to make tilt-rotor drones for dangerous
Arctic operations.
“The
Roselektronika holding (part of Rostec) will begin production of unmanned
convertiplanes, which in the future will be able to operate in the Far North,”
RIA News reported.
According to RIA News, Rostec and Aeroxo initially
will build Aeroxo’s existing ERA-100, a four-engine tilt-rotor with a six-foot
wingspan, a 5.5-pound lifting capacity and a range of around 75 miles at a top
speed of 75 miles per hour.
ERA 100
In the future, the two companies will work on a
much larger drone with a 175-pound payload, according to the RIA News report.
The Aeroxo drones can carry a wide range of sensors including cameras and
mapping-lasers.
“This is
both a technical and a commercial decision by Rostec, one of Russia’s largest
defense-industrial conglomerates,” said Samuel Bendett, an advisor at the
Center for Naval Analyses in Virginia.
“Presently
and for the near future, Russia will be investing in its Arctic infrastructure,
both to tap the natural resources and to secure the Northern Route for the
impending rise of sea-based traffic,” Bendett said. “A tiltrotor aircraft
offers the advantages of both helicopter and aircraft in terms of lift
capacity, in-flight stability and airspeed.”
Russian industry is working on several tilt-rotor
drones. Russian Helicopters, the national rotorcraft-manufacturer, has
displayed tilt-rotor drones at various military and defense expos, Bendett
said. “Rostec is positioning itself in the rapidly maturing market for these
kinds of products in order to retain a market share.”
The Arctic
can be unforgiving for manned aircraft. Crews must “contend with mountain
ranges, icing conditions, volatile sea states, unpredictable sea ice, extreme
temperatures and large swings in seasonal daylight, all with a lack of
support or communications infrastructure,” the California think-tank
RAND explained.
Replacing manned vehicle with drones could save
money and lives, Bendett said.
“The Russian
Far North is a dangerous environment for many manned aircraft, and the Russian
industry and military is turning to unmanned systems specifically developed for
the Arctic weather conditions as a way to save money, expand capabilities and
prevent potential human pilot losses.”
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