Transcript Slide 1
BAE Systems Military Air & Information Overview MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 1 Military Air & Information Key facts - Approx 15,500 people - 2009 Turnover of c£4bn - Organised as 2 “lines of business” – Combat Air – Information Superiority & Services Our Mission: Working as an integral part of the team delivering information superiority and effective air power, our aim is to give real advantage to our customers worldwide. Trusted to deliver always MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 2 Military Air & Information - Footprint MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 3 Warton Site Overview MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 4 Warton Site Overview – Approx 7,500 employees on site. – Site approx 283 hectares with a runway of 2422 metres. – Main Projects: Hawk, Typhoon, Tornado, Harrier, F-35 Lightning II, Nimrod MRA4, Autonomous Systems and Future Capability – Specialist Capabilities: Flight test and development, electronic warfare and wind tunnels, avionic systems engineering, flight simulation, radar cross-section range, engine running hush house, support engineering, training solutions MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 6 Samlesbury Site Overview MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 7 Samlesbury Site Overview – Approx 5,000 employees on site. – Site approx 142 hectares – Main Projects: Typhoon and F-35 Lightning II – Specialist Capabilities: Advanced manufacturing technology, carbon fibre composites facility and advanced tooling manufacture, supply chain expertise – Samlesbury Development: – Continuing expansion of presence on-site – Viability of Regional Aerospace Business Park being developed – Other businesses on site: – BAE Systems Saudi Arabia – Logistics & Information Systems MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 8 Samlesbury Site Heritage • Municipal airfield proposed in 1922 to serve Blackburn and Preston. • Construction didn’t begin until 1939 - Flight Shed No.1 built as flight test facility for English Electric. • By Dec 42 all 5 main hangars and 3 runways completed. • By end of war, 3,000 bombers built and flown from Samlesbury. • Canberra production commenced in 1949 and early 50’s saw Samlesbury begin final assembly of the Lightning. • End of 1960’s Jaguar production started and 70’s saw Concorde and Tornado production at Samlesbury. • Tornado, T-45 Goshawk and Airbus produced through the 80’s. • Eurofighter Typhoon and F-35 most recent additions to Samlesbury’s proud history. MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 9 Samlesbury Site Master Plan - 2007 to 2015 F-35 Supply Marshalling facility Ph 1 & 2 Phased expansion of F-35 Machining Facility Phased expansion of F-35 major units assembly facility Phase 1 F-35 Machining Facility (2010) Potential new Products Centre (2016) MEST Facility (2009) Welfare Facility (2012) Phase 1&2 Flexible office buildings (2009) Reception, New site entrance and associated Local Highways infrastructure (2008/9) AFAF Extension (2010) Site wide rationalisation and resilience activities MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 10 Military Air & Information The Products MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 11 Unmanned Aircraft Systems MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 12 Unmanned Aerial Systems HERTI – HERTI is a low cost, high endurance Unmanned Air System (UAS), providing solutions to a wide range of military and civil operational needs – HERTI offers a fully autonomous flexible solution, providing high quality imagery using safe, reliable platforms, able to integrate seamlessly with current and future information networks MANTIS – An indigenous UK programme to integrate technologies and capabilities necessary for deep and persistent ISTAR (Intelligence, Surveillance, Target Acquisition and Reconnaissance) onto an unmanned autonomous system TARANIS – Provide the UK MoD with experimental evidence on the potential capabilities and help to inform decisions on the future mix of manned and unmanned fast jet aircraft – Taranis aims to push the boundaries of technology by providing advancements in low observability capability and autonomous mission systems operations demonstrating the feasibility and utility of UAVs MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 13 F-35 Lightning II MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 14 F-35 Lightning II – The world’s most advanced combat aircraft and the first and only stealthy supersonic, multi-role fighter – Partnered with Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman – BAE Systems' experience and expertise in military aircraft is key to the development of the airframe, vehicle and mission systems – The aft fuselage and the vertical and horizontal tails are designed, manufactured and assembled by BAE Systems – The System Development and Demonstration phase is estimated to be worth more than £1.3bn to BAE Systems – First flight of the Conventional Take-Off and Landing aircraft took place in December 2006 – First flight of Short Take-Off and Landing aircraft took place in June 2008 with BAE Systems test pilot Graham Tomlinson at the controls – The UK MoD has selected the carrier variant of F-35 MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 15 F-35 Lightning II BAE SYSTEMS - Military Air & Information LOCKHEED MARTIN - Palmdale LOCKHEED MARTIN - Aeronautics NORTHROP GRUMAN – Air Combat Systems MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 16 Hawk MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 17 Hawk • Hawk is the world’s most successful trainer with 18 customers worldwide • The Hawk provides a seamless transition between basic flying training and operational conversion to both current, and projected, front line combat aircraft types • Hawk is a critical part of an integrated training system • Largest 2 programmes currently UK & India MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 18 Typhoon MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 19 Typhoon – Typhoon is the world’s most advanced new generation multi-role / swing-role combat aircraft available on the market. It has been ordered by six nations: UK, Germany, Italy, Spain, Austria and Kingdom of Saudi Arabia – It is Europe’s largest military collaborative programme employing over 100,000 jobs in 400 companies across Europe – Eurofighter GmbH is the consortium set up to manage the development and production of the complete Typhoon weapon system – 559 Typhoons are currently under production contract – Typhoon Tranche 3A contract was signed in July 2009 – Signature of an agreement between the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the UK Government covers the supply of 72 Typhoon aircraft to the kingdom. Deliveries commenced in June 2009 – Current export campaigns include Japan (BAE Systems/Alenia led) and India (Cassidian led) MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 20 Typhoon Workshare BAE Systems (Germany Cassidian) Alenia (Spain Cassidian) Baseline U.K. 232 37.5% Based upon Germany Italy Spain 180 121 87 30% 19.5% 13% Total = 620 MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 21 BAE Systems in the North West Economic Importance and Community Links MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 22 BAE Systems’ economic importance to the North West – North West is the region in which BAE Systems’ presence is most critical to the regional economy – BAE Systems’ considerable presence in NW of particular importance to Government policies aimed at reducing regional disparities and developing a ‘knowledge economy’ – The North West is by far the most important region for BAE Systems in the UK, accounting for about half of its 35,000 UK employees – These include 9,300 skilled technical jobs, and 6,000 managerial and professional jobs – For every 10 jobs directly supported by BAE Systems in the NW another 13 are created in the supply chain Source : The Economic Contribution of BAE Systems to the UK in 2006, Oxford Economics/Geo Economics, April 2008 MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 23 BAE Systems’ economic importance to the North West – Just under 3% of all knowledge intensive private sector jobs and 12% of knowledge intensive production sector jobs (nearly one job in eight) in the NW are directly generated by BAE Systems – In the Central Lancashire City Region BAE Systems accounts for a third of direct employment in knowledge intensive manufacturing – More suppliers in the North West (1,200) than any other region – Support from BAE Systems (e.g. in mentoring schemes) has been critical to developing and maintaining supply networks in the region Source : The Economic Contribution of BAE Systems to the UK in 2006, Oxford Economics/Geo Economics, April 2008 MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 24 BAE Systems’ economic importance to the North West – Military Air Solutions in the NW recruits 100 graduates a year, investing £80,000 in each for salary, skills and learning over a two year development programme – BAE Systems Training Centre in Preston trains up to 200 apprentices a year (to NVQ Level 3 equivalent), with a completion rate of 80% plus – Significant investment at BAE Systems’ Samlesbury site to expand footprint and consolidate activity Source : The Economic Contribution of BAE Systems to the UK in 2006, Oxford Economics/Geo Economics, April 2008 MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 25 BAE Systems – Part of the community MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 26 BAE Systems in the local community – Community sponsorship activities – Charity Challenge programme – Site based partner charities – Volunteering projects – Local site community liaison groups – Public Forums to explain substantive issues or developments at sites MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 27 BAE Systems in the local community – Annual education road show for local schools – Ambassadors – Engineers into Schools – Partnership school programme – Take Your Sons and Daughters to Work Day MAI Standard Presentation – January 2011 28 REAL PERFORMANCE. REAL ADVANTAGE.