Driverless Boat Testing To Take Place Off England’s South Coast

Driverless boats and aircraft will be tested by defence giant BAE Systems off the south coast of England. trialling robotic systems for use in search and rescue operations, and within the oil and gas and defence industries.

The testing will take place around the coasts Portsmouth and Southampton, and on the south east side of the Isle of Wight.

The testing has received founding through the Solent Local Enterprise Partnership to the sum of £457,000, and will see BAE Systems set up a dedicated autonomous testing service.

The defence firm will be joined by other organisations, including the University of Southampton, Blue Bear Systems Research and Marine Electronic Systems, who will aid BAE Sytems in providing the infrastructure for the testing service.

Driverless boat testing

“Autonomous and unmanned systems are widely regarded as a vital technology for the future, but there is a great deal of work to be done if we are to unlock its true potential and understand how they are best integrated into wider systems,” said Frank Cotton, BAE Systems’ Combat Systems head of technology Frank Cotton

“A wide range of organisations from the defence and commercial sectors, along with academia, have ambitions for this technology and this unique service will allow them to find valuable ways to use it whilst furthering its development.”

Cotton noted that the driverless testing service is expected to go live later this year, and will enable customers to conduct trials of their own unmanned boats and aircraft in a controlled yet realistic maritime environment.

BAE Systems has already tested autonomous marine vehicles as part of the Royal Navy’s ‘Unmanned Warrior’ exercises which was the first large scale demonstration of robotic systems in a maritime environment.

BAE Systems appears keen to put cutting edge technology at the forefront of defence and warfare, having also worked with the University of Birmingham to explore the use of virtual reality headsets such as the Oculus Rift, to remotely control battlefield operations.

Quiz: What do you know about cyber security in 2017?

Roland Moore-Colyer

As News Editor of Silicon UK, Roland keeps a keen eye on the daily tech news coverage for the site, while also focusing on stories around cyber security, public sector IT, innovation, AI, and gadgets.

Recent Posts

Alphabet Value Surges Over $2tn On Dividend Plan

Google parent Alphabet sees market capitalisation surge over $2tn on plan to over first-ever cash…

2 hours ago

Google Asks US Court To Dismiss Federal Adtech Case

Google asks Virginia federal court to dismiss case brought by US Justice Department and eight…

2 hours ago

Snap Sees Surge In Users, Ad Revenues

Snapchat parent Snap reports user growth, revenues in spite of tough competition, in what may…

3 hours ago

Intel Shares Sink As AI Surge Hits Chip Revenue

Intel shares sag after company shares gloomy revenue predictions, as data centre chip demand hit…

4 hours ago

Email Provider Complains To EU Over Reduced Google Rankings

Germany's Tuta Mail says Google broke EU's new DMA rules with March algorithm update that…

4 hours ago

US Regulator Probes Effectiveness Of Tesla Autopilot Recall

US auto safety regulator opens new investigation into adequacy of Tesla Autopilot recall, saying it…

5 hours ago