www.airandspaceforces.com
Open in
urlscan Pro
34.74.8.155
Public Scan
Submitted URL: https://link.militarytimes.com/click/37400967.128659/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYWlyYW5kc3BhY2Vmb3JjZXMuY29tL3RlY2gtaW5ub3ZhdGlvbi1uYXRvLW...
Effective URL: https://www.airandspaceforces.com/tech-innovation-nato-air-force/?utm_source=sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=mil-ebb
Submission: On November 09 via api from RU — Scanned from CA
Effective URL: https://www.airandspaceforces.com/tech-innovation-nato-air-force/?utm_source=sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=mil-ebb
Submission: On November 09 via api from RU — Scanned from CA
Form analysis
1 forms found in the DOMGET /
<form role="search" method="get" id="header-search" class="search-form" action="/" style="display: none;">
<input type="search" class="search-field" placeholder="Search …" value="" name="s">
<input type="submit" class="search-submit" value="">
<span class="icon icon-close close-search" style="display: none;"></span>
</form>
Text Content
We value your privacy DISAGREE We and our partners store and/or access information on a device, such as cookies and process personal data, such as unique identifiers and standard information sent by a device for personalised advertising and content, advertising and content measurement, audience research and services development.With your permission we and our partners may use precise geolocation data and identification through device scanning. You may click to consent to our and our 1473 partners’ processing as described above. Alternatively you may click to refuse to consent or access more detailed information and change your preferences before consenting. Please note that some processing of your personal data may not require your consent, but you have a right to object to such processing.Your preferences will apply to this website only and will be stored in Browser Cookies for 13 months. You can change your preferences or withdraw your consent at any time by returning to this site and clicking the "Privacy" button at the bottom of the webpage. Please note that this website/app uses one or more Google services and may gather and store information including but not limited to your visit or usage behaviour. You may click to grant or deny consent to Google and its third-party tags to use your data for below specified purposes in below Google consent section. MORE OPTIONSAGREE Skip to content Login Search Login Search * News * News Home * Air * Space * Personnel * Software Modernization * Electronic Warfare * Data in Defense * Warfighter Training * National Security * Technology * Budget * Daily Report * Today’s Report * Airframe * Subscribe! * Magazine * Current Issue * Back Issues * Almanac * Get The Magazine * History Home * Chronology: History of Airpower * Valor * Namesakes * About Us * About Us Home * Our Staff & Products * Join AFA * Advertise with Us * Contact Us * Reuse and Reprint Permission * Weapons & Platforms Subscribe Close Image Cynthia Cook, CSIS, and panelists Jason Rathje director of the DOD Office of Strategic Capital, Dame Fiona Murray vice chair of the board of directors for the NATO Innovation Fund (NIF) and Barbara McQuiston, chair of the board of directors of the Defence Innovation Accelerator for the North Atlantic, (DIANA), speak at a CSIS event on Nov. 7. Screenshot Expand Photo Share Article TO BOOST TECH INNOVATION, NATO FOLLOWS PATH BLAZED BY AIR FORCE Nov. 7, 2024 | By Shaun Waterman Share Article NATO has taken a page from the Air Force’s innovation playbook, setting up a technology accelerator and a venture fund to nurture and financially support small companies working on cutting edge technology development in critical fields. “The U.S. has been really doing a lot of very important work … and many of the European countries, the U.K. and others, are really trying to learn from that and do that themselves,” Dame Fiona Murray, vice chair of the board of directors for the NATO Innovation Fund (NIF), said during an event at the Center for Strategic and International Studies on Nov. 7. In a later email to Air & Spaces Forces Magazine, Murray specifically cited the work done by the U.S. Air Force’s AFVentures team, as well as the National Security Strategic Investment Fund in the UK as the inspiration for NIF’s work.” Established in 2020, AFVentures makes small (under $2 million) initial awards in two stages to companies prototyping new technologies that the Air Force can use. The NATO fund, launched last year, has 1 billion euros, or just over $1.08 billion, contributed by the governments of 24 of the 32 NATO member states, said Murray, who is also professor of entrepreneurship and associate dean of innovation at the MIT Sloan School of Management. The fund, which is structured as a standalone entity without formal links to NATO, will make investments by purchasing equity in early stage startups, just like private sector venture capitalists do, but with a couple of important differences, she explained. First, the fund was structured to make investments that would mature in about 15 years, as opposed to the 7-10 year timeline commercial VC funds tend to operate on. “That allows us to be, let me call it, impatiently patient,” Murray said, explaining that NIF wants to make sure businesses have time to mature, but they also want to deploy the technologies they were developing “as rapidly as possible.” Second, the fund trains and helps equip the startups it funds to protect their intellectual property from cyber theft. “We really pay attention to protecting our companies, to making sure that they protect the ideas that they’re developing from adversaries and that they are security minded right at the get go,” she said. Third, just like the Air Force innovation accelerator AFWERX, NIF offers its companies training, support, and mentorship to help navigate the complex and difficult process of bidding for and winning military contracts. “We support our portfolio companies in … making their way through the labyrinth of different institutional structures and mechanisms that can allow them to be successful,” she said. That process is especially complicated by the absence of a common framework or even language for technology assessment among the different member states, Murray added. “One of the things that would help us tremendously is if we could develop a better shared language,” she said. Reciprocity between NATO militaries would help speed the best ideas to the widest possible adoption. “We need a way for saying, ‘OK, we have evidence that something worked,’” and for that to be acceptable in another country; or for a mechanism by which competition winners in one nation could get credit for that in another nation’s acquisition process. “That’s when we begin to really smooth the path for some of the best companies,” she said. Many of the companies getting NIF investments will have been originally developed and nurtured by the Defence Innovation Accelerator for the North Atlantic, or DIANA, added Barabar McQuiston, chair of the DIANA governing board. Unlike NIF, DIANA is a formal NATO organization, covering all 32 NATO member-states, with hubs in Estonia, the U.K., and Canada. DIANA also works with a network of more than 20 affiliated accelerator sites and around 180 test centers in innovation clusters all over the alliance, she said. DIANA will gives grants and in-kind assistance to startups in nine technology areas (next-gen communication networks; AI; autonomy; quantum-enabled technologies; biotechnology and human enhancement; energy and propulsion; novel materials and manufacturing; and aerospace), and launched challenges in three of them last year, McQuiston said. Out of 1,300 proposals, 44 were selected for as the first cohort for phase one—winning the companies a six-month stint in a local accelerator to start work turning their ideas into businesses. Ten of those have progressed through a competition to phase two, test and experimentation, she said. Four of the phase two participants had taken part in a recent NATO exercise in Italy, McQuiston said. “That’s important, because then we can really see how the technology is doing,” she said. The companies “can engage with the end user and … can really get a good feeling for what’s needed in the security market to meet the demands and the needs [of the warfighter], or even think of whole new solutions and capabilities that could be an advantage for us.” Five more challenges will be launched this year, and DIANA aims to get 75 companies on contract for the next phase one cohort, McQuiston said, adding that the aim of DIANA and NIF together is to create an ecosystem that can take an idea and develop it through early stage prototyping and development, all the way through military contracting to full-blown commercialization. Technology LATEST NEWS THE F-16 HAS NO BUILT-IN LADDER, BUT THAT COULD CHANGE SOON THANKS TO ONE PILOT PHOTOS: NEARLY 15 PERCENT OF AIR FORCE B-52 BOMBERS DEPLOYED RESERVE WING BECOMES FIRST IN THE AIR FORCE TO GET ITS OWN F-35 WHAT MILITARY PERSONNEL POLICIES COULD CHANGE UNDER PRESIDENT TRUMP PENTAGON PLANS $6 BILLION IN UKRAINE AID AHEAD OF PRESIDENTIAL CHANGE SUBSCRIBE TO THE DAILY REPORT Get your daily fix of Air & Space Force news delivered right to your inbox every day. There's no more reliable source for news about your Air & Space Forces. Subscribe Today RELATED CONTENT DOD INVESTING IN TECH FOR BASE DEFENSE AND DRONE SWARMS Oct. 31, 2024 The Pentagon’s science and technology office is investing to develop new solutions for defending far-flung bases, controlling satellites in space, and enabling autonomous drones to collaborate, said Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Mission Capabilities Thomas Browning. KENDALL: IN US-CHINA ‘RACE FOR TECHNOLOGICAL SUPERIORITY,’ AI MAY BE THE KEY Oct. 29, 2024 China thinks it will be able to invade Taiwan by 2027 and has developed a technology edge in many key areas—but it is artificial intelligence that may be the decisive factor should conflict erupt, Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall said. LOCKHEED WORKING ON TECH TO INTEGRATE F-35 WITH CCAS Oct. 24, 2024 Lockheed Martin is investing in new technologies to enable its F-35 fighters to easily control and interact with up to eight autonomous Collaborative Combat Aircraft—and planning to bid in the next-round of the Air Force's autonomous drone program, company officials told investors during an Oct. 22 earnings call. HEADBANDS THAT CAN TAKE VITAL SIGNS: AIR COMMANDOS TRY OUT HIGH-TECH FABRICS Oct. 17, 2024 High-Altitude, Low-Opening (HALO) parachute jumpers from Air Force Special Operations Command are sporting new headbands, woven from advanced fibers that measure and report the wearers’ vital signs, transmitting the data to a tablet or other device nearby. The HALO jumper headband is just one of a slew of new clothing items… PENTAGON SPENDING BIG TO COUNTER CHEAP DRONES Oct. 11, 2024 Anduril Industries said it received $350 million to build 500 high-explosive-equipped examples of its Roadrunner uncrewed VTOL aircraft. If detonation isn't needed, it can be safely recovered and re-used, the company said. WHY RUSSIA SHOT DOWN ITS OWN S-70 DRONE OVER UKRAINE Oct. 8, 2024 The wreckage of one of Russia’s newest stealth drones is now in the hands of the Ukrainian forces—a potential intelligence windfall for that country and its partners—after a Russian fighter chased, then shot it down over Ukrainian territory Oct. 5. TO MAKE ABMS WORK, AIR FORCE HIRES A DIGITAL INTEGRATOR Oct. 8, 2024 The Air Force has tapped Leidos, the defense IT giant, to help oversee the digital infrastructure for its Advanced Battle Management System—part of the department’s contribution to the Pentagon’s larger joint all-domain command and control efforts. HOW A NEW ‘TASKRABBIT’-LIKE APP COULD HELP WIN WARS, TRANSFORM PUBLIC SERVICE Oct. 8, 2024 A new mobile app developed by a team of joint service members, GigEagle is like a military version of the civilian app Taskrabbit, where users can find individuals to help put together an IKEA cabinet, move a mattress, or other temporary handy jobs. But instead of finding people to help… ANDURIL, IN NEW PARTNERSHIP, TAKES AIM AT SPACE Oct. 1, 2024 Anduril, the Silicon Valley defense startup that's made a splash as a finalist in the Air Force’s Collaborative Combat Aircraft program, now aims to get into the space business as well. The company announced a partnership with fellow startup Apex Space on Oct. 1; aiming to build payloads for Apex's… * Facebook * X/Twitter * Instagram * LinkedIn * Daily Report * Contact Us * Advertise * Subscribe! * Air & Space Forces Association * Reuse and Reprint Permission * Privacy Policy Air & Space Forces Magazine is the official publication of the Air & Space Forces Association, 1201 S. Joyce St., C6 / Second Fl., Arlington, Va., 22202. Copyright 2024 We use cookies and other data collection technologies to provide the best experience for our visitors. Click here to request that your data not be shared with third parties.