On behalf of the governments of France, Germany and Spain, the French General Directorate for Armament (DGA) has awarded to Dassault Aviation, Airbus, Indra, Eumet, and their industrial partners the contract for the Demonstrator Phase 1B of the Future Combat Air System (FCAS). This landmark contract, amounting to € 3.2 billion, will cover work on the FCAS demonstrator and its components for about three and a half years.
Dassault Aviation, Airbus, Indra and Eumet welcome this major step forward that reflects the determination of France, Germany, and Spain to develop a powerful, innovative and fully European weapon system to meet the operational needs of the countries armed forces.
R&T work and development activities
Discussions held over the last months have enabled the creation of a solid basis for cooperation
This contract notification comes on the heels of the signature of the industrial agreements supporting the demonstrator Phase 1B by Airbus, Dassault Aviation, Indra and Eumet as prime contractors of the program and by their industrial partners from the three nations. Discussions held over the last months have enabled the creation of a solid basis for cooperation between industry and the three governments.
This continues the successful Phase 1A demonstrators’ related R&T work and development activities, which enabled the identification of key technologies and the launch of the demonstrators' developments.
Paving the way for the development phase of the program, this demonstration phase 1B will allow the continuation of flying demonstrators and required cutting-edge technologies development and maturation as well as project architecture consolidation, with in-flight demonstrations targeted in the next phases by 2028-2029.
Aeronautical industrial ecosystems
An adapted and efficient industrial organization has been set up and built around technological pillars
The program is made up of a set of systems: New Generation Fighters teaming with Remote Carriers and connected through a Combat Cloud. In order to meet the ambitions and challenges of such a program, an adapted and efficient industrial organization has been set up and built around technological pillars.
Each pillar is under the leadership of an industrial champion acting as prime, working in close cooperation with its main partners and leveraging each nation’s aeronautical industrial ecosystems.
In addition to their prime role per pillar, Airbus, Dassault Aviation and Indra act as national coordinators to ensure the overall coherence of the demonstrators and the overall program’s steering and work consolidation.
Industrial governance of the Phase 1B
The industrial governance of the Phase 1B is organized per domain as follows:
- NGWS Consistency, Demonstrations and Consolidation with Airbus, Dassault Aviation and Indra Sistemas as co-contracting partners
- New Generation Fighter (NGF), with Dassault Aviation for France as the prime contractor, and Airbus as the main partner for Germany and Spain
- NGF Engine with the 50/50 Joint Venture Eumet -between Safran Aircraft Engines for France and MTU Aero Engines for Germany- as prime contractor and ITP Aero for Spain as main partner
- Unmanned systems, Remote Carrier (RC) with Airbus for Germany as prime contractor, MBDA for France and Satnus for Spain as main partners
- Combat Cloud (CC) with Airbus for Germany as the prime contractor, Thales for France and Indra Sistemas for Spain as the main partners
- Simulation with Airbus, Dassault Aviation and Indra Sistemas as co-contracting partners
- Sensors with Indra Sistemas as prime for Spain, and Thales for France and FCMS for Germany as main partners
- Enhanced Low Observability (stealth) with Airbus as prime contractor for Spain, Dassault Aviation for France and Airbus for Germany as main partners
- Common Working Environment with Airbus, Dassault Aviation, Indra Sistemas and Eumet as co-contracting partners
The industrial partners thank the three nations for their confidence and reiterate their firm commitment and total mobilization to make this program the armed wing of Europe's strategic autonomy thanks to the reinforcement of the operational, technological, and industrial sovereignty of its defense.