The locally produced
laser weapon demonstrated its capability to knock out fixed wing drones at long
range, swarm drones, and surveillance equipment
India on
Sunday (13 April ’25) tested a locally produced laser weapon and demonstrated
its capability to knock out fixed wing drones at long range, swarm drones, and
surveillance equipment, entering an exclusive league of countries that possess
such technology, the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) said.
The successful trial of
the directed energy weapon (DEW) system with a 30-kilowatt laser was carried
out at the National Open Air Range in Kurnool, Andhra Pradesh.
“The
lightning speed of engagement, the precision and the lethality delivered at the
target within few seconds made it the most potent counter-drone system,” the
DRDO said in a statement. The few countries that have mastered this technology
to disable missiles, drones and smaller projectiles include the US, Russia,
China, the UK, Germany and Israel.
The DRDO’s
Hyderabad-based Centre for High Energy Systems and Sciences (Chess) has
developed the system along with some other government laboratories, academic
institutions and private industry.
The DRDO explained how
the system works.
After a target is detected by a radar or its
inbuilt electro optic (EO) system, the DEW can engage it at the speed of light,
using a laser beam to cut through it, causing structural failure or more
impactful results if the warhead is targeted.
“This type of cutting-edge weaponry has the
potential to revolutionise the battlespace by reducing the reliance on
expensive ammunition, while also lowering the risk of collateral damage,” the
DRDO said.
The development comes at
a time when the proliferation of unmanned aerial systems (UAS) and the
emergence of drone swarms as asymmetric threats are driving the demand for DEWs
with counter-UAS and counter-swarm capabilities.
“DEWS are weapons of the
future and these will be used for burning electronic sensors on board missiles,
aircraft, unmanned aerial vehicles and even satellites. This technology gives
the user unlimited supply of ‘ammunition’, it is far cheaper than traditional
weapons and doesn’t require a big logistics network,” said strategic affairs
experts Air Marshal Anil Chopra (retd).
The DEW will soon replace traditional kinetic
weapons and missile defence systems due to its ease of operation and cost
effectiveness, the DRDO said. “The requirement for cost-effective defence
solutions to offset the low-cost drone attacks is driving the adoption of DEWs
by military organisations worldwide. The cost of firing it for a few seconds is
equivalent to the cost of a couple of litres of petrol. Therefore, it has the
potential to be a long-term and low-cost alternative to defeat the target.” Defence
minister Rajnath Singh recently described the power of technological innovation
in combat theatres as breathtaking.
“In the Ukraine-Russia
conflict, drones have virtually emerged as a new arm, if not a transformative
science. The majority of losses of soldiers and equipment have been attributed
neither to traditional artillery nor to armour but to drones. Similarly, space capacities in the low earth
orbit are transforming military intelligence, surveillance, positioning,
targeting and communications, taking combat to a new high,” he said at the
Defence Services Staff College (DSSC), Wellington, Tamil Nadu, last week.