UAV & Drones
Airbus and Garuda Technologies Partner for Flexrotor Drone Leasing
Airbus and Garuda Technologies sign contract for up to 18 Flexrotor UAS to support North American expansion with Drones-as-a-Service leasing.

This article is based on an official press release from Airbus.
On March 10, 2026, Airbus Helicopters and Garuda Technologies Inc. announced a new contract for the delivery of up to 18 Flexrotor Uncrewed Aerial Systems (UAS). According to the official press release, this acquisition is designed to support Garuda’s strategic expansion into the North American market.
Garuda Technologies Inc., a Delaware-based subsidiary of India’s Garuda Aerospace, plans to offer the newly acquired Flexrotor fleet to enterprise and government clients. The company will utilize a “Drones-as-a-Service” (DaaS) model, providing both dry leasing (equipment only) and wet leasing (equipment accompanied by operators and crew) options.
This procurement targets a variety of civil, parapublic, and industrial missions. As noted in the provided industry research data, anticipated use cases for the leased fleet include infrastructure inspection for roads, railways, and pipelines, as well as disaster relief, law enforcement, and wildfire monitoring.
The Airbus Flexrotor: Tactical Capabilities for Civil Use
The Flexrotor platform was originally developed by US-based Aerovel, a company Airbus acquired in early 2024 to enhance its tactical uncrewed aerial systems portfolio. The integration of the Flexrotor allows Airbus to address the rising global demand for long-endurance, expeditionary drones capable of dual-use operations across both military and civil sectors.
Technical Specifications and Performance
Classified as a Group 2 small tactical vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) drone, the Flexrotor is engineered primarily for Intelligence, Surveillance, Target Acquisition, and Reconnaissance (ISTAR) missions. According to the technical specifications provided in the research report, the aircraft features a maximum take-off weight of 25 kilograms (55 lbs) and can carry a payload of up to 8 kilograms, integrating advanced electro-optical systems and other sensors.
The system boasts an operational endurance of 12 to 14 hours in standard configurations, making it highly suitable for prolonged surveillance. It requires a minimal operational footprint of just 3.7 by 3.7 meters (12 by 12 feet) and can autonomously launch and recover from both land and sea, including vessels without dedicated flight decks. Furthermore, the system is highly expeditionary, capable of transitioning from stowed to airborne in under 30 minutes.
“We are very proud to partner with Garuda as they have selected the Flexrotor to support the development of their global UAS portfolio. The Flexrotor offers the best trade-off in terms of payload capability, endurance and expeditionary agility thanks to its small footprint,” stated Olivier Michalon, Executive Vice President, Global Business for Airbus Helicopters, in the press release.
Garuda’s Global Expansion Strategy
Founded by Agnishwar Jayaprakash, Garuda Aerospace has established a formidable presence in India, reportedly holding a 30 percent market dominance in the domestic agricultural drone segment. The company’s historical data indicates it has manufactured over 5,000 drones, logged more than one million flight hours, and served upwards of 500 enterprise and government clients globally.
Entering the North American Market
In mid-2025, Garuda secured export licenses for the United States, Australia, and the Middle East. The incorporation of Garuda Technologies Inc. in Delaware serves as the primary vehicle for the company’s penetration into the North American market, transitioning the firm from a domestic manufacturer to a global service provider.
“Our collaboration with Airbus Helicopters to integrate the Flexrotor into our global leasing portfolio marks a significant milestone in our international expansion and investment strategy,” said Agnishwar Jayaprakash, Founder and CEO of Garuda, in the official announcement. “The Flexrotor’s arrival further strengthens our ability to deliver high-endurance, mission-critical unmanned solutions for the most demanding operations worldwide.”
AirPro News analysis
We observe three major industry trends converging in this acquisition. First, the rise of the Drones-as-a-Service (DaaS) model is actively lowering the barrier to entry for advanced aerial intelligence. High-endurance, military-grade drones are capital-intensive; by offering wet and dry leases, Garuda enables civil enterprises and local governments to access premium hardware without the financial burden of outright purchase and long-term maintenance.
Second, the deployment of the Flexrotor highlights the increasing overlap between defense technology and public safety infrastructure. A platform heavily marketed for military ISTAR missions is now being positioned for civil applications such as wildfire monitoring and pipeline inspection, demonstrating the versatility of modern dual-use technology.
Finally, Garuda Aerospace’s expansion via a US subsidiary underscores the maturation of India’s deep-tech and aerospace startup ecosystem. This move reflects a broader strategic shift from domestic manufacturing to competing in highly regulated, premium international markets.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Airbus Flexrotor?
The Airbus Flexrotor is a Group 2 small tactical VTOL uncrewed aerial system designed for long-endurance surveillance and reconnaissance missions. It features a 12-to-14-hour flight time, a 25 kg maximum take-off weight, and requires a very small operational footprint for launch and recovery.
How will Garuda offer these drones to clients?
Garuda Technologies Inc. will offer the Flexrotor fleet through a Drones-as-a-Service (DaaS) model. Clients can choose between dry leases, which provide only the equipment, and wet leases, which provide the equipment along with trained operators and crew.
What industries will benefit from this leasing program?
The leased Flexrotor fleet is targeted at civil, parapublic, and industrial sectors. Key applications include infrastructure inspection (power lines, oil and gas pipelines), law enforcement, search and rescue, and disaster relief.
Sources: Airbus Press Release
Photo Credit: Airbus
UAV & Drones
Mach Industries Wins DIU Contract for RIMES Maritime UAS
Mach Industries awarded a DIU contract to develop the Atlas hybrid-electric UAS for long-range Navy strike missions.

Mach Industries has secured a Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) contract to develop a hybrid-electric unmanned aerial system (UAS) capable of launching 1,000-pound payloads over 1,400 nautical miles from United States Navy vessels lacking traditional flight decks.
Announced in a June 16, 2026, press release, the award positions Mach Industries as the aircraft integrator for the Runway Independent Maritime Expeditionary Strike (RIMES) program. The company is partnering with propulsion developer Whisper Aero to deliver the new aircraft, designated as Atlas. The DIU initially published the RIMES solicitation in February 2026 to address the Navy’s need for long-range strike capabilities from expeditionary locations and smaller surface combatants.
Atlas UAS and JetFoil propulsion specifications
The Atlas UAS utilizes a hybrid-electric design intended to operate from unimproved rotary-wing landing zones while maintaining the control simplicity of a fixed-wing aircraft. According to Mach Industries, the platform requires less than half the thrust-to-weight ratio typically needed for vertical flight.
Whisper Aero is supplying its JetFoil propulsion system for the Atlas. The manufacturer states the JetFoil enables 90 degrees of flow turning at 95 percent efficiency, generating a lift coefficient of 40 at 15 knots.
“We developed JetFoil to propel the next generation of conventional, short, and vertical takeoff and landing aircraft silently and efficiently,” said Mark Moore, Chief Executive Officer of Whisper Aero. “With JetFoil, Atlas can effectively meet the needs of the RIMES mission to operate even from Destroyer class vessels.”
Mach Industries President and Chief Strategy Officer Nathan Diller noted the platform is designed to deliver improvements in mission lethality, logistics footprint, acoustic signature, system safety, and energy efficiency.
Expanding distributed maritime lethality
The RIMES program targets a specific operational gap for the Department of the Navy. The military branch requires systems that can execute long-range strikes using standard munitions without relying on aircraft carriers or land-based runways.
Target vessels for the Atlas system include Arleigh Burke-class destroyers, Littoral Combat Ships, and future FF(X) frigates. Reporting from Breaking Defense indicates this initiative is designed to counter anti-ship weapons in contested environments by distributing heavy munition launch capabilities across a wider array of smaller ships.
DIU Director Owen West emphasized the economic and tactical drivers behind the program.
“We are determined to dramatically lower our cost-per kill, while reducing our risk to force, replacing warfighters with economical fires and robots,” West stated.
The exact financial value of the DIU contract awarded to Mach Industries was not disclosed in the announcement.
AirPro News analysis
We view the RIMES contract award as a clear indicator of the U.S. Navy’s commitment to distributed maritime operations. By enabling destroyers and frigates to launch 1,000-pound payloads over 1,400 nautical miles, the Navy can significantly complicate adversary targeting. The choice of a hybrid-electric platform is particularly notable. While traditional solid-rocket or turbojet boosters are standard for maritime strike missiles, the Atlas UAS approach suggests a prioritization of acoustic stealth and fuel logistics. If Whisper Aero’s JetFoil system meets its stated efficiency metrics in operational testing, it could validate a new propulsion paradigm for heavy-payload expeditionary drones.
Sources: Mach Industries (via PR Newswire)
Photo Credit: Mach Industries
UAV & Drones
Vigilant Aerospace Completes FlightHorizon PILOT DAA Flight Tests
Vigilant Aerospace tests FlightHorizon PILOT onboard detect-and-avoid system for drones ahead of FAA Part 108 BVLOS rulemaking.

Vigilant Aerospace Systems has completed a series of flight tests and demonstrations for its FlightHorizon PILOT system, an onboard detect-and-avoid (DAA) technology designed for uncrewed aircraft systems (UAS). The June 19, 2026, announcement details a technical milestone for the integration of autonomous drones into national airspace.
The tests, conducted at Oklahoma State University’s Uncrewed Aircraft Flight Station, demonstrated the system’s ability to track aircraft and calculate avoidance maneuvers using a low-power onboard computer. In a press release issued by the company, Vigilant Aerospace positioned the technology as a critical enabler for Beyond Visual Line of Sight (BVLOS) operations ahead of the FAA’s anticipated Part 108 flight rules.
System architecture and testing parameters
The recent flight tests evaluated two distinct versions of the technology. FlightHorizon PILOT-C is designed for cooperative airspace, utilizing transponders and digital radio receivers to track nearby traffic. FlightHorizon PILOT-M targets non-cooperative airspace by integrating additional sensors, including onboard radar, to detect aircraft lacking active transponders.
The core software is based on two licensed patents from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). During the demonstrations, the system successfully processed sensor data through a single-board computer to execute avoidance maneuvers.
“These most recent flight test milestones provide a path to enabling the industry to execute safe beyond visual line-of-sight flight for both small and large UAS, with fully onboard safety systems,” said Kraettli L. Epperson, CEO of Vigilant Aerospace Systems.
Development pathway and regulatory alignment
The FlightHorizon PILOT system originated as a military project. Vigilant Aerospace initially developed the technology for the United States Air Force (USAF) under a Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) contract. The transition to a civilian application received financial support through an Industry Innovation Program grant from the Oklahoma Center for the Advancement of Science and Technology (OCAST).
The commercialization of onboard DAA systems aligns with shifting regulatory frameworks. The FAA is currently drafting the Part 108 rule, which will establish standardized regulations for BVLOS drone operations in the US. Equipment capable of autonomous collision avoidance is expected to be a foundational requirement for operators seeking certification under the new framework.
AirPro News analysis
The successful demonstration of a low-footprint DAA system addresses one of the most persistent technical bottlenecks in the commercial drone sector. While ground-based radar and observer networks have facilitated early BVLOS waivers, scaling commercial operations requires the aircraft to carry its own separation assurance technology. If the FAA’s upcoming Part 108 rule mandates onboard DAA for specific operational risk categories, systems like FlightHorizon PILOT will transition from experimental capabilities to mandatory compliance equipment. We expect the market for lightweight, multi-sensor DAA suites to accelerate rapidly as the rulemaking process concludes.
Sources: Vigilant Aerospace Systems
Photo Credit: Vigilant Aerospace Systems
UAV & Drones
ERC System Unveils Victor U250 Hybrid-Electric Cargo Drone
ERC System launched the Victor U250 cargo drone at ILA Berlin 2026, targeting 250 kg payload and military logistics gaps.

Munich-based advanced air mobility startup ERC System unveiled the Victor U250, a hybrid-electric heavy-lift cargo drone, at the ILA Berlin Air Show on June 10, 2026. Concurrently, the company signed a Memorandum of Understanding with defense contractor Rheinmetall and the German State of North Rhine-Westphalia to establish a dedicated production facility for the uncrewed aircraft.
In a press release issued by ERC System, the company detailed that the aircraft is designed to bridge a critical logistics gap for military and disaster-response operators. The platform targets the payload space between small uncrewed aerial vehicles and conventional heavy-lift helicopters, utilizing a hybrid-electric propulsion system that combines infrastructure-independent vertical takeoff capabilities with the speed and range of fixed-wing flight.
Technical specifications and capabilities
The Victor U250, along with its military variant designated the U250-M, is designed with a lift-and-cruise architecture. Key specifications released by the manufacturer include:
- Payload capacity: 250 kilograms (551 pounds)
- Flight range: 300 kilometers (186 miles)
- Cruise speed: 250 kilometers per hour (155 miles per hour)
Reporting by Aviation Week indicates the drone has a wingspan of approximately 8 meters (26 feet) and is sized to fit inside a standard 20-foot ISO shipping container for rapid transportability. The cargo bay accommodates two ISO-standard pallets and features front-loading access with aerial drop capabilities.
ERC System Chief Commercial Officer Maximilian Oligschläger outlined the market rationale to Aviation Week:
“Militaries have identified a gap. There are a lot of drones that can carry 20 kg, and above 500 kg there are helicopters, but there are very few products that can carry 150-300 kg vertically.”
Production scaling and Rheinmetall partnership
To support the industrialization of the Victor platform, ERC System secured a strategic partnership with Rheinmetall. The Memorandum of Understanding, signed alongside representatives from North Rhine-Westphalia, outlines plans to build a manufacturing facility in the region.
In a statement released by Rheinmetall, CEO Armin Papperger noted the agreement lays the foundation for scaling the Victor U250 technologically and industrially within Germany. The planned facility is expected to create a three-digit number of jobs by 2029. Aviation Week reported that the partners aim to scale production to approximately 250 aircraft annually by 2032.
Certification pathway and flight testing
ERC System plans to begin flight testing the first Victor prototype in the third quarter of 2026, with initial deliveries targeted for 2028. The program builds on data gathered from the company’s Romeo flight demonstrator.
According to AIN, the Romeo prototype weighs approximately 2.7 tonnes, making it the heaviest uncrewed electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft currently flying in the European Union. The demonstrator has been operating under the Specific Operations Risk Assessment (SORA) SAIL III stage established by the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA). ERC System expects additional Victor aircraft to join the flight test program in 2027 to support further EASA SORA approvals, having already applied for a Design Verification Report under the SAIL IV stage.
AirPro News analysis
The launch of the Victor U250 highlights a distinct pivot within the European advanced air mobility sector toward dual-use and defense applications. As capital markets for commercial passenger eVTOLs tighten, startups are finding immediate traction by addressing the tactical logistics requirements of European militaries. By partnering with an established defense prime like Rheinmetall, ERC System mitigates the manufacturing scale-up risks that have historically bottlenecked aerospace startups. This industrial backing positions the Victor U250 as a viable near-term procurement option rather than a distant conceptual project.
Sources: ERC System
Photo Credit: ERC System
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