Exclusive-Epirus' efforts on drone-zapping weapons get boost with $200
million cash infusion
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[February 15, 2022] By
Eric M. Johnson and Mike Stone
SEATTLE/
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Technology
startup Epirus, which is competing with Boeing Co and others to supply
drone-zapping weapons to the U.S. military, has raised $200 million in a
private transaction that lifts its valuation to $1.35 billion, the
company told Reuters.
The cash infusion comes as the United States scrambles to develop
countermeasures against widely available commercial drones that military
and law-enforcement officials say pose mounting tactical threats to
everything from military bases and refineries to mass gatherings like
Sunday's NFL Super Bowl.
Militias and insurgent groups including Islamic State have rigged
off-the-shelf drones with explosives to attack high-profile targets
including commercial ships and armored combat vehicles.
Last month, Iraq's air defenses shot down two explosive-laden drones as
they approached the Ain al-Asad air base, which hosts U.S. forces, west
of Baghdad.
"I am very concerned about it," Marine General Kenneth McKenzie, the
head of U.S. Central Command, told a congressional committee last year.
"Small, commercially available drones are one of the most persistent and
dangerous threats that we see in the (Middle East)," McKenzie said.
The proliferation of cheap drones has raised the need to find an
alternative to traditional aerial defenses, such as surface-to-air
missiles, which can cost $3 million apiece.
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Torrance, California-based Epirus joins a number of aerospace juggernauts
developing so-called directed-energy weapons of varying size and cost that zap
unmanned aerial vehicles using lasers or microwaves.
A 300-kilowatt, ground-based laser being developed by Boeing and General Atomics
targets drones as well as missiles and aircraft.
Raytheon Technologies Corp and KBR Inc unit Kord Technologies last year won a
$123 million contract to supply the U.S. Army with 50-kilowatt lasers mounted to
eight-wheeled Stryker combat vehicles.
Epirus has partnered with General Dynamics Corp to install a microwave-pulsing
weapon on the Stryker vehicles. Its portfolio includes a ground-based microwave
cannon called Leonidas and a smaller Pod version that can be carried in a pack
or mounted to a drone. It declined to discuss the kilowatt strength of its
products.
Epirus raised $200 million in Series C funding from 8VC, Bedrock, Broom Ventures
and General Dynamics Land Systems, among other investors, the company said. An
announcement was expected later on Tuesday.
Deployment of the technology above U.S. air space has been held off by Federal
Aviation Administration regulations that prohibit interfering with commercial
aircraft, a category that so far includes commercial drones.
The Pentagon has given U.S. military bases the green light to shoot down private
and commercial drones that could endanger aviation safety or pose other threats.
(Reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle and Mike Stone in Washington; Editing
by Mark Porter)
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