Royal Navy Accelerates Adoption of Unmanned Systems
Last week, the Royal Navy carrier HMS Princes of Wales hosted the
Future Maritime Aviation Force Accelerator Day, bringing together experts from
the navy, MOD and industry to meet and discuss the vision for drone
operations.
Brigadier Dan Cheesman, Chief Technology Officer for the Royal Navy,
co-hosted the event with Commodore Nick Walker, Deputy Director Naval Aviation,
calling on attendees to consider how technology and innovation could transform
the way the navy operates in the skies now and into the future.
The Future Maritime Aviation Force, Brig. Cheesman said, was also
about seeing how the Royal Navy could gain advantage from the pace of
technological development already underway in the commercial
sector.
"The aim is to transition rapidly from what we have now to whatever
we want in the future," said Brig. Cheesman. "We live in an exponential world of
technological change and if we can integrate the latest and get it on
operations, it will deliver battle-winning advantage. Specifically, getting that
technology onto ships like HMS Prince of Wales would be a
game-changer."
Brig Cheesman added it should be the Royal Navy's goal that these new
capabilities should be delivered in weeks and months, not years and decades as
is currently accepted.
The work of the Royal Navy's NELSON digital acceleration lab supports
this idea. They have continued the development the "plug in and play" MAPLE
system that, when integrated onto Royal Navy ships, will simplify the process of
accessing and using autonomous and un-crewed technology.
Trials earlier this year in Norway saw this system used on HMS Albion
and last year on HMS Argyll. Going forward, all Royal Navy ships will possess
open architecture, fully-networked, organic crewless aviation systems with
Prince of Wales being at the forefront of a series of trials.
As previously announced by First Sea Lord Admiral Tony Radakin, this
will see the aircraft carrier being used as a testbed for un-crewed aerial
vehicles.
"When we have drones and other equipment routinely embarked on ships,
that's when we really start to understand what they can do and get an idea of
what we can achieve," said Commodore Nick Walker, Deputy Director of Navy
Aviation. "We have to do it safely, in the right way and coherently, but I want
to see the type of kit on display today on frontline operations within the
year."
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