Zürcher Nachrichten - Changing face of war puts Denmark on drone offensive

EUR -
AED 4.342242
AFN 74.489343
ALL 96.428634
AMD 442.901864
ANG 2.116121
AOA 1084.231017
ARS 1626.766715
AUD 1.67151
AWG 2.128262
AZN 2.007786
BAM 1.955367
BBD 2.369475
BDT 143.768145
BGN 1.948124
BHD 0.445829
BIF 3488.841714
BMD 1.182368
BND 1.492976
BOB 8.129199
BRL 6.124429
BSD 1.176439
BTN 106.989294
BWP 15.577548
BYN 3.373567
BYR 23174.413136
BZD 2.366076
CAD 1.61586
CDF 2695.798981
CHF 0.913263
CLF 0.025851
CLP 1020.750018
CNY 8.168685
CNH 8.141892
COP 4371.805743
CRC 561.475591
CUC 1.182368
CUP 31.332752
CVE 110.240573
CZK 24.226307
DJF 209.503579
DKK 7.471112
DOP 72.313977
DZD 153.771611
EGP 56.518597
ERN 17.73552
ETB 183.081734
FJD 2.627517
FKP 0.877135
GBP 0.874225
GEL 3.162867
GGP 0.877135
GHS 12.929135
GIP 0.877135
GMD 86.901049
GNF 10321.712969
GTQ 9.027
GYD 246.095471
HKD 9.242157
HNL 31.124104
HRK 7.534286
HTG 154.205832
HUF 380.261968
IDR 19872.059264
ILS 3.683277
IMP 0.877135
INR 107.28878
IQD 1541.232432
IRR 49807.252908
ISK 144.910824
JEP 0.877135
JMD 183.309383
JOD 0.838297
JPY 182.490209
KES 151.650608
KGS 103.397667
KHR 4730.971743
KMF 494.229769
KPW 1064.141474
KRW 1702.77542
KWD 0.36242
KYD 0.980366
KZT 587.189961
LAK 25208.98791
LBP 105352.801998
LKR 363.993191
LRD 217.061905
LSL 18.95288
LTL 3.491226
LVL 0.715203
LYD 7.442351
MAD 10.78751
MDL 20.205608
MGA 5034.884397
MKD 61.662889
MMK 2483.06461
MNT 4218.363867
MOP 9.470341
MRU 47.105563
MUR 54.637173
MVR 18.279416
MWK 2040.047977
MXN 20.28039
MYR 4.595928
MZN 75.559206
NAD 18.95288
NGN 1583.403223
NIO 43.290591
NOK 11.258992
NPR 171.18307
NZD 1.975341
OMR 0.454628
PAB 1.176439
PEN 3.951841
PGK 5.130885
PHP 68.199375
PKR 328.792348
PLN 4.225115
PYG 7606.314633
QAR 4.28815
RON 5.096127
RSD 117.406815
RUB 90.717606
RWF 1718.219286
SAR 4.435358
SBD 9.512366
SCR 17.281186
SDG 711.200051
SEK 10.674087
SGD 1.495033
SHP 0.887082
SLE 28.96878
SLL 24793.665367
SOS 671.15129
SRD 44.499015
STD 24472.630763
STN 24.494676
SVC 10.293545
SYP 13076.487639
SZL 18.946802
THB 36.632158
TJS 11.14703
TMT 4.138288
TND 3.415743
TOP 2.846859
TRY 51.837021
TTD 7.963101
TWD 37.164169
TZS 3032.550465
UAH 50.921517
UGX 4235.061617
USD 1.182368
UYU 45.649885
UZS 14367.8772
VES 475.112572
VND 30781.177774
VUV 139.994379
WST 3.20945
XAF 655.811689
XAG 0.013585
XAU 0.000229
XCD 3.195409
XCG 2.120294
XDR 0.815619
XOF 655.811689
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.935587
ZAR 18.925993
ZMK 10642.727396
ZMW 22.276064
ZWL 380.722019
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    23.8

    +0.17%

  • JRI

    0.0800

    13.13

    +0.61%

  • NGG

    0.0100

    90.28

    +0.01%

  • BCC

    -2.2500

    82.13

    -2.74%

  • GSK

    -0.8444

    59.52

    -1.42%

  • BCE

    0.2300

    25.8

    +0.89%

  • AZN

    -2.2500

    204.2

    -1.1%

  • RELX

    0.4700

    31.46

    +1.49%

  • RIO

    0.7500

    97.09

    +0.77%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.96

    +0.04%

  • BTI

    1.0900

    62.08

    +1.76%

  • RYCEF

    0.4000

    18.2

    +2.2%

  • VOD

    0.1200

    15.65

    +0.77%

  • BP

    -0.3308

    38.18

    -0.87%

Changing face of war puts Denmark on drone offensive
Changing face of war puts Denmark on drone offensive / Photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen - Ritzau Scanpix/AFP

Changing face of war puts Denmark on drone offensive

As drones transform the face of war from Ukraine to Gaza, Denmark is opening a military drone testing centre to develop cutting-edge technology and boost its national defence.

Text size:

It will be based at Hans Christian Andersen airport in Odense, already home to one of Europe's biggest airspaces dedicated to drone testing.

It has almost 2,000 square kilometres (775 square miles) at its disposal over land and sea at the UAS Denmark Test Centre.

"The Danish drone industry and also the academic environment around drones is quite unique for the size of a country like Denmark," Andreas Graae, a military technology researcher and assistant professor at the Royal Danish Defence College, told AFP.

Denmark's defence ministry announced in late March that it would allocate 725 million kroner ($110 million) for the new military drone testing centre, drawing on lessons learned from the war in Ukraine.

By 2026, around 100 Danish military personnel will be training there as drone operators. The centre will also collaborate with companies and researchers to keep Denmark on the cutting edge of drone technology.

For Jerome Jouffroy, a professor of mechanical and electrical engineering at the University of Southern Denmark, the opening of the military drone centre "is fantastic". It will enable him to focus his research on the military's specific needs.

"Sometimes we can be in a bit of a fishbowl," he said.

"We try to invent solutions, but are these really what's going to be most interesting in the combat of the future?" he added.

The centre, he added, "will give me some tactical knowledge: How are drones used? What are actually the best technologies we can develop for operations?"

- 'Dehumanised' warfare -

Outside the premises of the Quadsat company on a recent spring day, drones equipped with satellite reading software solutions buzzed loudly as they took off and landed in gusty winds.

Founded a decade ago, the Danish start-up manufactures drones that monitor and manage the radio spectrum.

Used in a military setting -- Quadsat has a partnership in Ukraine -- its devices can be used to identify enemy radar systems.

"What our technology can do is to go out and pinpoint where these emissions are coming from and how they are moving about, and it gives a new layer of intelligence on the battlefield," Quadsat chief executive and co-founder Joakim Espeland told AFP.

The war in Ukraine has clearly contributed to the booming drone industry.

"Almost 70 percent of the losses in Ukraine are due to drones," researcher Graae said.

"In the Danish defence industry... we're seeing growth especially in software companies, but also robotics and drone companies," he said.

Jouffroy said the military drone hub would contribute to advances in European technology.

When it comes to components, high-end technology comes primarily from the United States while the lower-end is mainly sourced from China, he said.

"So how do we Europeans, in between Trump and China, place ourselves to develop our own technology?" he asked.

Graae expected significant investment in the drone sector, as well as the traditional defence material Denmark is acquiring to beef up its military.

He expected a growing share of warfare to be conducted by unmanned systems like drones.

"I think we're looking at a frontline that's becoming more and more dehumanised," Graae said. "Drones and also unmanned ground vehicles are slowly taking over some parts of the frontline."

P.Gashi--NZN