U.S. Military Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) Market Forecast 2010-2015
The U.S. military Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) market has witnessed a meteoric growth over the past decade. UAS development went through a quantum leap, from lab concept to battle-tested proven technology. Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) have proven their worth in operations around the world. Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) are considered today a key component of U.S. defense transformation and an integral part of U.S. military doctrine.
The U.S. military UAV market is projected to grow at a CAGR of 10% between 2010 and 2015, says “U.S. Military Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) Market Forecast 2010-2015″, a new research report from Market Research Media. The report finds that the U.S. military UAV market will generate $ 62 Billion revenues over the period 2010 – 2015.
The report provides detailed year-by-year (2010 – 2015) forecasts for the following U.S. U.S. Military Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) market segments:
- R&D, tests and evaluation
- Unmanned Air Vehicles
- Payloads
- Ground Control Systems
- Service, support and maintenance
- Training
- Data management
- Revenues by UAV Groups (by vehicle airspeed, weight, and operating altitude)
Market Research Media analysts have found that there is a widening gap between growing UAV fleet and UAV infrastructure development, especially in such sectors as training; service, support and maintenance; and data management. This gap creates a number of market opportunities for UAV vendors, both large defense contractors and small technology companies.
“More aircraft help us manage their maintenance, but do not affect the number of Predators we can fly at any given time. More ground control stations would be helpful, and the system is trying to produce more. But even if we had more ground control stations and aircraft, we would not be able to employ them without more pilots and sensor operators,” said Lieutenant General Walter E. Buchanan III, Commander U.S. Central Command Air Forces. “The effectiveness of UAVs as surveillance systems is unmatched, and has had great effect in both theaters of operation.”
Military procurement of UAS, including unmanned aircrafts, payloads, CGS makes the DoD the single largest consumer of UAV technology in the world. We can predict with a great deal of confidence that the U.S. Government will continue to invest in UAS as much as needed to keep its dominance, both technological and pure force factor, in the next decades.
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U.S. Military Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) Market Forecast 2010-2015, Tabular Analysis, Publication: 04/2010, Pages: 70, Figures: 42, Tables: 13, Single User Price: $5,950.00 Reports are delivered in PDF format within 24 hours. Analysis provides quantitative market research information in a concise tabular format. The tables/charts present a focused snapshot of market dynamics. 2CheckOut.com Inc. (Ohio, USA) is an authorized retailer for goods and services provided by Market Research Media Ltd. |
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U.S. Military Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) Market Forecast 2010-2015, Tabular Analysis, Publication: 04/2010, Pages: 70, Figures: 42, Tables: 13, Global Site License: $9,950.00 Reports are delivered in PDF format within 24 hours. Analysis provides quantitative market research information in a concise tabular format. The tables/charts present a focused snapshot of market dynamics. 2CheckOut.com Inc. (Ohio, USA) is an authorized retailer for goods and services provided by Market Research Media Ltd. |
Table of Contents
1. Market Report Scope & Methodology
1.1. Scope
1.2. Research Methodology2. Executive Summary
2.1. Key Report Findings3. UAV: Classification, Major Systems, Key Capabilities, Inventories and Trends
3.1. Small UAS (SUAS)
3.1.1. Battlefield Airman Targeting Micro Air Vehicle (BATMAV): Wasp III
3.1.2. Force Protection Airborne Surveillance System: RQ-11 Raven
3.1.3. Scan Eagle interim solution
3.1.4. RQ-7B Shadow 200 213.2. Medium UAS
3.2.1. MQ-1C Extended Range Multi-Purpose UAS (Sky Warrior)
3.2.2. Vertical Take-off and Landing Tactical Unmanned Air Vehicle (Navy Fire Scout)
3.2.3. Army Fire Scout
3.2.4. MQ-1 Predator
3.2.5. MQ-9 Reaper3.3. Large UAS
3.3.1. RQ-4 Global Hawk
3.3.2. Broad Area Maritime Surveillance (BAMS)3.4. Prospective UAV Platform Capabilities
3.4.1. Prospective Technology: Fuel Cell Powered UAV
3.4.2. Navy Unmanned Combat Air System Demonstration UCAS-D
3.5. UAV Cost Factor
3.6. Major UAV Manufacturers4. Payloads
4.1. Multi-mission Modular Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear (CBRN) Payloads Initiative
4.2. Airborne Signals Intelligence Payload
4.3. Multi-Platform Radar Technology Insertion Program
4.4. Sensor Suites: Market Opportunities for Small/Midsize Technology Companies
4.5. Weapons
4.6. Payloads: Procurement Cost Trend5. Control Ground Stations (CGS)
5.1. Market Opportunities: Continuity of Operations Beyond-the-line-of-sight6. Training
7. Service, Support and Maintenance
8. Data Management
9. U.S. Military UAV Market in Figures
9.1. U.S. Military UAV Market 2010-2015 by Sectors
9.2. U.S. Military UAV Market by UAS GroupsList of Figures
Fig. 1- Wasp III
Fig. 2- RQ-11 Raven
Fig. 3- Scan Eagle
Fig. 4- RQ-7B Shadow 200
Fig. 5- Sky Warrior
Fig. 6- Navy Fire Scout
Fig. 7- MQ-1 Predator
Fig. 8- MQ-9 Reaper
Fig. 9- The number of Predator/Reaper sustained orbits in 2010-2015
Fig. 10- RQ-4 Global Hawk
Fig. 11- Potential set of platform capabilities
Fig. 12- NRL’s Ion Tiger Sets 26-Hour Flight Endurance Record
Fig. 13- UCAS-D: An artist’s conception of the X-47B long-range unmanned aerial vehicle on the flight deck of an aircraft carrier
Fig. 14- UAV Procurement Cost, $/kg
Fig. 15- Airborne Signals Intelligence Payload Concept
Fig. 16- Testing GMTI and SAR modes on a Proteus test aircraft
Fig. 17- Sensor Payload Procurement Cost, $/pound
Fig. 18- Line-of-Sight UAS Operational Concept
Fig. 19- Beyond-the-Line-of-Sight UAS Operational Concept
Fig. 20- The number of operators to run the U.S. Military UAV fleet in 2010-2015
Fig. 21- Training flight hours to sustain UAS inventories, Mln Hours
Fig. 22- The number of hours flown by UAVs in Iraq and Afghanistan
Fig. 23- UAV-related Data Flow, Petabytes per year
Fig. 24- Computational Requirements of the U.S. UAV Community, Logarithmic Scale
Fig. 25- U.S. Military UAV Market Forecast 2010-2015, $Mln
Fig. 26- Cumulative U.S. Military UAV Market 2010-2015, market share by sectors, %
Fig. 27- U.S. Military UAV Market Sectors 2010-2015: R&D, UAVs, Payloads and Ground Control Systems, $Mln
Fig. 28- U.S. Military UAV Market Sectors 2010-2015: Service, Training and Data Management, $Mln 61
Fig. 29- U.S. Military UAV Market Forecast 2010 – 1015: R&D, Tests and Evaluation, $Mln
Fig. 30- U.S. Military UAV Market Forecast 2010 – 1015: Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, $Mln
Fig. 31- U.S. Military UAV Market Forecast 2010 – 1015: Payloads, $Mln
Fig. 32- U.S. Military UAV Market Forecast 2010 – 2015: Ground Control Systems, $Mln
Fig. 33- U.S. Military UAV Market Forecast 2010 – 1015: Service, Support and Maintenance, $Mln
Fig. 34- U.S. Military UAV Market Forecast 2010 – 2015: Training, $Mln
Fig. 35- U.S. Military UAV Market Forecast 2010 – 1015: Data Management, $Mln
Fig. 36- Cumulative U.S. Military UAV Market 2010 – 2015, Market Share by UAS Groups, %
Fig. 37- U.S. Military UAV Market 2010-2015 by UAS Groups, $Mln
Fig. 38- U.S. Military UAV Forecast 2010 – 1015: Group 1, $Mln
Fig. 39- U.S. Military UAV Forecast 2010 – 1015: Group 2, $Mln
Fig. 40- U.S. Military UAV Forecast 2010 – 1015: Group 3, $Mln
Fig. 41- U.S. Military UAV Forecast 2010 – 1015: Group 4, $Mln
Fig. 42- U.S. Military UAV Forecast 2010 – 1015: Group 5, $MlnList of Tables
Table 1 – UAS classes by weight, level of operational control and mission focus
Table 2 – UAS groups by vehicle airspeed, weight, and operating altitude
Table 3 – Characteristics of Selected Tactical and Theater-Level Unmanned Aircraft
Table 4 – Key System Capabilities
Table 5 – Military services’ inventories of groups 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 unmanned aircraft as of beginning 2010
Table 6 – UAV Manufacturers
Table 7 – Video/Electro-Optic/Infrared (EO/IR) Sensor Payloads
Table 8 – Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR)
Table 9 – Emerging Sensor Technologies
Table 10 – DOD Organizations and Initiatives Addressing UAV Training Challenges
Table 11 – U.S. Military UAV Market Forecast 2010-2015, $Mln
Table 12 – U.S. Military UAV Market 2010-2015 by Sectors, $Mln
Table 13 – U.S. Military UAV Market 2010-2015 by UAS Groups, $Mln

