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Wednesday, Mar 27, 2024

Drone Market Looking Up

AeroVironment Inc. has plans to build a drone that flies higher and longer than any it has built before – a solar-powered plane that could soar through the upper atmosphere for weeks or months at a time and carry a load of telecommunications transmitters. The company, which is headquartered in Monrovia but has a manufacturing and testing facility in Simi Valley, laid out its latest goals as part of a Jan. 3 announcement of a joint venture with Tokyo-based telecommunications giant SoftBank Corp., called HAPSMobile Inc. The new partners will join an ambitious field of projects – including a flying-wing in the works at Facebook Inc. and a balloon-based experiment by Google parent Alphabet Inc. – that aim to lift telecommunications transmitters up to 65,000 feet above sea level in order to grab a piece of the broadband market in developing countries. AeroVironment also has secondary plans in the works. The company aims to use the drones to serve as communications hubs for the U.S. military as its forces rely more and more on high-tech weaponry, gear and communications. “Militaries have been deploying more and more data-intensive technologies on the battlefield,” said Steve Gitlin, AeroVironment vice president of corporate strategy. “There’s the potential for platforms like this to help with that.” The U.S. military leased bandwidth from commercial satellite operators to the tune of about $1 billion in 2012, according to a report by the Government Accountability Office. The Department of Defense’s satellite communication requirements are expected to grow by nearly 70 percent between 2013 and 2023, according to a report by the Defense Business Board. The Department of Defense accounted for 40 percent of the firm’s revenue in fiscal year 2016, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The majority of AeroVironment’s small surveillance drones are designed with the military in mind. The roster already includes several long-endurance, high-altitude drones, including a solar-powered flying wing called the Helios Prototype, built in coordination with NASA. The flying wing flew to a world-record altitude of 96,863 feet in 2001. AeroVironment’s new telecommunications drone would improve upon the firm’s prior drones, said Gitlin, who declined to give a more detailed description of the aircraft. The drone also would cost much more than the company’s average product, he said, declining to state the aircraft’s exact price. It reportedly cost more than $1 million to develop the Helios Prototype in 2001 – several times more than AeroVironment’s small drones, such as the hand-launched Raven, which costs between $100,000 and $200,000 a unit. “From a unit-value perspective, it’s very different from our current business,” said Gitlin. “We believe deploying this technology has the capability to be transformational.” Pseudo-satellites The joint venture HAPSMobile – HAPs stands for high-altitude pseudo-satellites – is a Japan-based corporation that is 95 percent funded and owned by SoftBank and 5 percent funded and owned by AeroVironment. AeroVironment is committed to contribute $5 million in capital for its 5 percent, and has an option to increase its ownership stake up to 19 percent. The venture will fund the development of the AeroVironment-built drone up to a net maximum value of $65 million. The exact design specifications of AeroVironment’s drone have not been disclosed, but long endurance aircraft typically are carried upward by solar-powered propellers and the ability to soar on thermal columns of air. They are considered potentially cheaper than satellites in providing broadband connectivity to remote regions, developing countries, disaster areas, and – according to AeroVironment – the battlefield. The Department of Defense is looking for additional data communication capacities on the battlefront because soldiers increasingly use networked devices and programs, such as global positioning systems, drones and battlefield management software. “You’ve gone from an environment where people traditionally use radios for voice communications to all these sensors in the battlefield,” said Ric Agardy, principal engineer in the military satellite communications division of Aerospace Corp. in El Segundo. Body cameras that record or live-stream battlefield footage are particularly data-hungry devices, he added. “That’s something that didn’t exist years ago, but now generates hundreds of thousands of megabits of data,” he said. Such technologies currently rely on line-of-sight or satellite communications equipment to stay connected to the military’s warfare network, but the Department of Defense is looking for alternatives and backups, said industry analysts. “Increasingly there is concern that more capable adversaries like China or Russia will have the ability to deny access to those satellites,” said Dan Gonzales, senior physical scientist with Rand Corp. in Washington, D.C. “They can actually shoot down these satellites as well as electronically jam them.” Long-endurance drones that fly at high altitudes and miles away from enemy fighters could also be potentially cheaper to build and fly than satellites, which cost millions of dollars to manufacturer and launch into orbit, and can’t be upgraded once they are in outer space, said Wahid Nawabi, AeroVironment’s chief executive officer. “As soon as you launch it, the communication gear you designed into the satellite, it is already out of date. … You can’t upgrade once you’re up there,” he said. “Solar HAPS, you can bring it down anytime you want.” Moreover, rising global demand for broadband as well as advances in technology make long-endurance drones economically viable for the first time, said Nawabi. “The cost curve on solar cells and batteries to enable the economics of this platform have (seen a dramatic) reduction in cost, which enables the business plan to be a lot more compelling,” he said. AeroVironment might have an opening to pitch its technology as the military assess plans for its next generation of satellites, said Bill Ostrove, an aerospace and defense analyst with Forecast International Inc. in Newtown, Conn. “I think the military remains dedicated to satellites,” he said. “But, if they are going to move in and disrupt the market, now is the time .”

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