Study To Be Conducted By BAE Systems, Dassault Aviation
Following the political agreement announced at the Farnborough Air Show in July this year, Dassault Aviation, BAE Systems, and a group of industrial partners have been awarded a two-year £120 million (approx $191 million) contract by the UK and French governments for a two-year co-operative Future Combat Air System (FCAS) Feasibility Phase study, formally signalling the start of work. The program will help define the Franco-British requirement for a Future Combat Air System (FCAS).

The contract was officially awarded to BAE Systems CEO Ian King and Eric Trappier, Chairman and CEO of Dassault Aviation, by the heads of the British and French defence procurement agencies, Bernard Gray, Chief of Defence Materiel for the UK MoD and Laurent Collet-Billon, Délégué Général pour l’Armement for the French DGA, during a ceremony at Dassault Aviation’s headquarters, Saint Cloud, France, on November 5 2014.
“We welcome this new step, which prepares the future of both manned and unmanned combat air systems," Trappier said. "It ensures French and British companies maintain their technological excellence which is vital to competitiveness in a globalized environment, and shows the commitment of France and Britain to remain leading aviation powers."
“This contract award is a key step in the partnership between our two nations, governments, and industries," said King. "The Feasibility Phase will allow UK and French industry to work closely together and provide a strong foundation for a potential follow-on Future Combat Air System Demonstration program as well as supporting a number of highly skilled jobs.”
Co-operation between the UK and France is seen as the optimum way to progress a UCAS (Unmanned Combat Air System) solution, while supporting both governments’ intentions for closer defence ties. The joint study contract is to be supplemented with additional UK and French national funding to the combined value of £80m / €100m (approx $127 million) in the same period.
The two-year study will build the foundations on which a long-term joint program will be based by focusing on the following key points:
- The development of concepts for an operational system, and
- The maturation of key technologies that will be required for a future operational UCAS.
Following the completion of the study at the end of 2016, work could then commence on a UCAS demonstration development program that addresses both nations’ future military requirements.
The Feasibility Phase will sustain hundreds of highly skilled jobs at Dassault Aviation and ourselves with more jobs sustained by Rolls-Royce, Selex ES, Snecma (Safran), Thales and SME's involved in the program.
In addition, the contract supports the strategically important Military Aerospace Industries in both nations and is testament to the importance that the UK and French governments place in maintaining a cutting edge, sovereign military air capability.
(Image from file)