Aerostat to Detect Aerial and Maritime Threats  

Aerostat to Detect Aerial and Maritime Threats  

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Aerostats have multiple uses in the photography and advertising fields, but these can also contribute to states’ security when used as aerial surveillance systems.

The Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) has begun local tests of a 55 m tethered aerostat system

that was acquired to enhance the republic’s continuous airborne radar coverage and maritime surveillance capabilities.

The system, which can detect aerial and seaborne threats at distances of up to 200 km, will be operated by the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF) from a base at the western part of the island.

According to IHS Jane’s 360, the aerostat is operated by a ground crew of eight personnel, and has a maximum operating height of 2,000 ft (600 m). The setup comprises a helium-filled airframe, a tether cable made of Kevlar, a mooring station, a high-strength winch system, and a suite of unspecified sensors.

The system, which was originally planned for deployment in 2015, was unveiled in a media event on 29 November in conjunction with a visit by Singapore’s defence minister Ng Eng Hen to the aerostat’s intended deployment site. He described the aerostat as a system that has been acquired to overcome the country’s lack of suitable high points from which it can deploy suitable radars that can complement the SAF’s existing network of ground and aerial sensors.

“All of us recognise that Singapore is a very small island, and that alone makes us very vulnerable to threats either from the air or sea,” said Ng, who then cited the 2010 Mumbai terror attacks as an example of what can happen should seaborne adversaries not be detected in time. “The very fact that we have [the aerostat system] adds another layer of defence, and confidence in terms of what we are able to detect with regards to aerial and maritime threats,” he added.