Building A Laser Weapons Capability: UK MoD Awards MBDA Led Consortium

01/07/2017

2017-01-07 According to an article published on January 5, 2017 by the UK MoD, “MOD awards £30m contract to produce Laser Directed Energy Weapon (LDEW) Capability Demonstrator to UK Dragonfire consortium, led by MBDA.”

The project will assess innovative LDEW technologies and approaches, culminating in a demonstration of the system in 2019. The contract will assess how the system can pick up and track targets at various ranges and in varied weather conditions over land and water, to allow precision use.

Image of David Armstrong, Managing Director MBDA United Kingdom (left) and Minister for Defence Procurement Harriett Baldwin MP (right).
Image of David Armstrong, Managing Director MBDA United Kingdom (left) and Minister for Defence Procurement Harriett Baldwin MP (right).

The project will inform decisions on the future of the programme and help the MOD’s Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl) establish a road map to an in-service capability.

If it is successful, the first laser weapons would come into service in the mid-2020s.

Minister for Defence Procurement, Harriet Baldwin said:

  • The UK has long enjoyed a reputation as a world leader in innovation and it is truly ground-breaking projects like the Laser Directed Energy Weapon which will keep this country ahead of the curve.
  • The Defence Innovation Initiative and £800M Defence Innovation Fund aim to encourage imagination, ingenuity and entrepreneurship, in pursuit of maintaining a military advantage in the future.
  • With a rising Defence budget, and a £178 billion equipment plan, our commitment to innovation will deliver a safer and more prosperous Britain.

The MOD’s investment in such innovative solutions demonstrates how the Government’s £178 billion equipment plan, supported by a rising Defence budget, is ensuring our Armed Forces have the most effective and innovative capability available. The Innovation Initiative aims to strengthen the Defence partnerships which make such projects possible, keeping the UK safe and secure in a complex world.

Dstl’s Peter Cooper added:

  • This is a significant demonstration programme aimed at maturing our understanding of what is still an immature technology. It draws on innovative research into high power lasers so as to understand the potential of the technology to provide a more effective response to the emerging threats that could be faced by UK armed forces.

 The UK Dragonfire consortium includes partners from across the UK with international reputations in this area including MDBA, QinetiQ, Leonardo, GKN, Arke, BAE Systems and Marshall ADG.

 https://www.gov.uk/government/news/uk-innovation-laser-weapon-contract-awarded

For MBDA’s look at laser weapons, see the following:

http://www.mbda-systems.com/innovation/preparing-future-products-3/high-energy-laser-weapon-systems/

According to MBDA: “Laser technology provides major advantages for military applications due to precise and scalable effects.

  • High precision and rapid on-target effect
  • Scalable effect
  • Avoidance of collateral damage caused by fragmenting ammunition
  • Low logistics overhead and minimum costs per firing.”