Airbus Zephyr
Solar High Altitude Platform System (HAPS)
reaches new heights in its successful 2021
summer test flights
11 October 2021
The Airbus Zephyr S
completes a successful 2021 test flight campaign
in the United States.The
final Airbus solar-powered High Altitude
Platform System (HAPS) flight touched down on
13th September in Arizona, USA, ending the most
ambitious and successful Zephyr flight campaign
to date.
The flight campaign had a
clear customer focus - to demonstrate how Zephyr
could be used for future operations, flying
outside of restricted airspace and over airspace
shared with commercial air traffic. Carrying an
Optical Advanced Earth Observation system for
Zephyr (OPAZ) payload, Zephyr proved its
operational value to provide instant,
persistent, and improved situational awareness.
“Working with Airbus and
the Zephyr team during the 2021 flight campaign,
significant progress has been made towards
demonstrating HAPS as a capability. This
summer’s activities represent an important step
towards operationalising the stratosphere” said
James Gavin, Future Capability Group Head at
Defence Equipment & Support, the procurement arm
of the UK Ministry of Defence.
“Defence investment in
cutting edge technology is key to the
development of world-leading military
capabilities. Zephyr is an important programme
within UK Strategic Command and the recent
successful flight has required many innovative
technical solutions. This represents a
significant milestone for Zephyr which is
informing the development of new concepts and
ways of enabling military operations,
particularly in the context of Multi-Domain
Integration.”Said Major
General Rob Anderton-Brown, Director Capability
and MDI Change Programme at Strategic Command.
The campaign consisted of
six flights in total, four low level test
flights and two stratospheric flights.The stratospheric flights flew for around
18 days each, totaling more than 36 days of
stratospheric flight in the campaign. This adds
a further 887 flight hours to the 2,435
stratospheric flight hours for Zephyr to date,
marks significant progress for fixed wing HAPS
and is a step towards making the stratosphere an
operational reality for its customers.
“Credible and proven
ultra-persistence, stratospheric agility, and
payload interoperability underscore why Zephyr
is the leader in its sector. It is a
sustainable, solar powered, ISR and network
extending solution that can provide vital future
connectivity and earth observation to where it
is needed.” said Jana Rosenmann, Head of
Unmanned Aerial Systems at Airbus.
Such an innovative and
potentially game-changing capability is part of
Airbus ambition to rapidly move towards
operationalizing the stratosphere.“Carbon Neutral”, Zephyr uses sunlight to
fly and recharge its batteries, using no fuel
and producing no carbon emissions.
With its ability to remain
in the stratosphere for months at a time, Zephyr
will bring new see, sense and connect
capabilities to both commercial and military
customers. Zephyr will provide the potential to
revolutionise disaster management, including
monitoring the spread of wildfires or oil
spills. It provides persistent surveillance,
tracing the world’s changing environmental
landscape and will be able to provide
communications to the most unconnected parts of
the world.