Terma Sees 2 New Buyer Groups Enter Anti-Drone Market as Demand Spreads Across Europe
Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · May 29
Terma Sees 2 New Buyer Groups Enter Anti-Drone Market as Demand Spreads Across Europe
1 articles · Updated · Bloomberg · May 29
Embassies and museums are now approaching Terma for counter-drone systems, marking a shift beyond the company’s traditional base of airports, ports and power facilities.
European energy operators are also placing orders, while Terma is in talks with ports, airports and bridge operators as concern over drone threats widens.
Terma began selling critical-infrastructure protection technology more than a decade ago, initially serving mostly Middle Eastern customers.
The broadened buyer pool signals that anti-drone defenses are moving from niche infrastructure protection toward wider adoption across civilian and public sites.
Advanced anti-drone systems are for sale, but can private facilities legally use them to neutralize a real threat?
Why are cultural sites and embassies suddenly shopping for military-grade anti-drone technology?
With Russia building swarm-killing defenses, are our airports and power plants prepared for the next wave of drone attacks?