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UAV NEWS
Britain, France award joint contracts for UAV program
by Richard Tomkins
London (UPI) Nov 6, 2014


Trio with drones near French nuke plant were 'model enthusiasts'
Bourges, France (AFP) Nov 06, 2014 - Two men and a woman arrested with drones near a French nuclear plant turned out Thursday to be harmless model enthusiasts and nothing to do with a mysterious spate of drone flyovers.

Prosecutor Vincent Bonnefoy told reporters that the two drone flights near the power station at Belleville-sur-Loire in central France "had no connection with the other nuclear sites overflown since October".

According to Bonnefoy, the trio said they wanted to take pictures with the drones of a model boat they were floating on a lake near the power station.

The two men, aged 24 and 31, were kept in custody however, to give investigators time to check out their story.

The 21-year-old woman was released.

They were "model enthusiasts", with a completely unblemished police record, the prosecutor said.

French authorities have been left scratching their heads as a series of unidentified drones have been spotted zooming over nuclear plants across the country.

State-run power company EDF rang the alarm bells last week when it announced it had filed a complaint with police after detecting the small unmanned aerial vehicles zipping over seven atomic plants in October.

Since then, more have been spotted and there have been at least 16 flyovers throughout France, usually at night, leaving jittery authorities clueless as to who is piloting these helicopter-type machines at a time of heightened vigilance in the face of Islamic extremism.

Some experts say they believe the recent spate of mystery fly-overs is probably being carried out to prove a point about nuclear security.

French law bans small, civilian drones from areas such as nuclear facilities, which are protected by a no-fly zone that spans a 2.5-kilometre (1.6-mile) radius and a height of 1,000 metres.

Three aerospace industry groups have received contracts by the British and French procurement agencies for the joint Unmanned Combat Air System.

The UCAS, also known as the Future Air Combat System, is envisioned as a system that would provide sustained surveillance, mark targets, gather intelligence, deter adversaries and carry out strikes in hostile territory.

"The development of Unmanned Combat Air Systems is of vital importance to the UK and France, which have the most capable and experienced armed forces in Europe and well-established defense industrial bases," said Bernard Gray, the British Ministry of Defense's chief of Defence Materiel said at a signing ceremony.

"By working together and drawing on a common vision we will see military, technological and financial benefit and sustain skills to fulfil our mutual needs and aspirations in the combat air sector."

The two-year contracts, worth about $191.6 million, were awarded to BAE Systems and Dassault Aviation; Rolls-Royce and Safran; and Selex ES - Thales. Under the awards, the companies would explore concepts and options for the potential collaborative acquisition of a UCAS in the future.

Included in the study would be UCAS general architectures, key technologies, and the definition of simulation tools to validate the technical choices and operational concepts.

The feasibility study is the precursor to a possible follow-on development program and a direct result of the Lancaster House treaties for closer military and defense industry ties between the two countries.

"The technological excellence of our defense-aerospace industry must be maintained over the long term," said Laurent Collet-Billon, head of the French Directorate General of Armaments. "It is a matter of sovereignty and operational superiority. This requires an ambitious investment strategy open to partnerships.

"The Franco-British cooperation on the unmanned combat air vehicle Future Combat Air System meets this demand and paves the way for the future of the European combat air sector."

The contract awards announced in Paris this week take immediate effect.


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