LONDON - Babcock International and Frankenburg Technologies have agreed to collaborate on the potential development of a maritime air defence system designed to counter one way attack drones, reflecting growing military concern over low cost unmanned threats.
The two companies have signed a memorandum of understanding to examine a containerised launch platform that would deploy Frankenburg’s low cost missiles. The concept is intended to provide a comparatively affordable, kinetic defence option for naval forces and for the protection of fixed sites such as ports and other critical infrastructure.
Under the proposed collaboration, Babcock would focus on integrating the system into a maritime ready platform, while Frankenburg would supply missiles designed for rapid, high volume production. The partners say the system is aimed at defending against mass drone attacks rather than traditional high end air threats, a shift driven by the widespread battlefield use of inexpensive one way attack drones.
The companies indicated that engineering work would be led from the United Kingdom, with an emphasis on developing domestic industrial capability and creating skilled jobs. Any resulting system would also be positioned for export to allied markets, particularly in Europe, where concerns over drone attacks on military and civilian infrastructure have increased since the war in Ukraine.
No development timeline, contract value, or government customer has been announced, and the agreement does not commit either company to a production programme. The memorandum establishes a framework for joint studies and potential system development rather than a confirmed procurement effort.
The collaboration highlights how defence companies are adjusting to the operational and economic challenge posed by cheap, expendable drones. Traditional naval air defence systems rely on expensive interceptors that are poorly matched to low cost threats. Efforts to field simpler, scalable C-UAS solutions could influence future naval force design and procurement priorities, particularly for countries seeking affordable ways to protect ships and infrastructure against mass attacks.