“DefExpo India 2016 will be different as it will be moving out of the national capital New Delhi for the first time since the exhibition started 15 years ago,” says an official of the defense ministry, which organizes the show.
THALES, RAYTHEON, RHEINMETALL and several private equity groups, including Carlyle, Bridgepoint, CVC, KKR, KPS and Triton, are expected to bid for the defense electronics business of AIRBUS GROUP, according to unconfirmed media reports. PRATT & WHITNEY earned $487m on $3.68b revenues in 2Q15 vs. $432m on $3.59b in 2Q14; it delivered 1,625 engines vs. 1,735.
Former Indian President Avul Pakir Jainulabdeen Abdul Kalam, acknowledged as the father of India’s missile technology, died July 27 after collapsing while delivering a lecture. Kalam spent four decades as a scientist and science administrator at the Defense Research and Development Organization and Indian Space Research Organization. He was responsible for the development and operationalization of the Agni and Prithvi missile families.
BOEING had $1.11b net income on $24.5b revenues in 2Q15 vs. $1.65b on $22b in 2Q14, which includes $536m after-tax charge on KC-46 Tanker program over estimated higher costs; BDS earned $546m on $7.5b vs. $582m on $7.7b, and has $48.4b backlog. GE AVIATION earned $1.27b on $6.25b revenues in 2Q15 vs. $1.2b on $6.09b in 2Q14; it delivered 945 engines vs. 988.
The Center for a New American Security (CNAS) think tank is raising questions about the recent open letter from high-profile scientists and academics – including Stephen Hawking and SpaceX founder Elon Musk – warning of the dangers of autonomous weapons. “The letter calls for a ban on ‘offensive autonomous weapons beyond meaningful human control,’ but what does that mean?” asks CNAS Ethical Autonomy Project Director Paul Scharre. “Most countries have departments or ministries of ‘defense,’ not offense.
North America The Pentagon expects to announce a winner for the new Long Range Strike Bomber competition in the coming months. Northrop Grumman and a Boeing/Lockheed Martin team are vying for the contract. U.S. Air Force officials continue to stress a “flyaway price” of $550 million per aircraft in fiscal 2010 dollars, and hint the contract announcement could come by fall. Europe
Boeing rolled out the first Royal Australian Air Force EA-18G Growler electronic attack aircraft July 29 at the company’s final assembly facility in St. Louis.
U.S. Navy Secretary Ray Mabus is keeping the service on course to deploy directed energy (DE) weapons by scrutinizing the way the service develops and buys the systems.
NASA’s Johnson Space Center has awarded Wyle Laboratories Inc. of El Segundo, California, a potential $1.44 billion contract to provide a wide range of medical and biomedical services in support of the agency’s human spaceflight programs, including research aboard the International Space Station.
A mobile weather station developed with support from the Office of Naval Research (ONR) is helping with recovery operations in challenging environments.
The U.K.’s minister of state for defense procurement met with top Pentagon officials July 28 and discussed a number of issues, including the F-35 and nuclear submarines.
JAXA says the test is the first supersonic flight of an experimental aircraft using low-boom design techniques to reduce both front and rear shock waves.
The U.S. Navy and Republic of Singapore Navy completed the 21st annual Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training (Carat) Singapore exercise earlier this month.
NASA’s efforts to foster private sector cargo and crew transportation services in support of the International Space Station could serve as cost-cutting model for U.S. human Mars exploration ambitions through the phased development of a commercial base on the Moon for propellant production, a space agency-backed study says.
Former Indian President Avul Pakir Jainulabdeen Abdul Kalam, acknowledged as the father of India’s missile technology, died July 27 after collapsing while delivering a lecture at a management institute.
The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board is expected to adopt findings that the co-pilot’s earlier-than-planned unlocking of the feathering tail mechanism on SpaceShipTwo was the probable cause of the fatal accident that struck the suborbital project on Oct 31, 2014.
British aero-engineering firm GKN is increasing its involvement in Airbus and Boeing commercial programs as well as Lockheed Martin's F-35 with the takeover of Dutch aerospace firm Fokker Technologies.