Research and development (R&D) in the defence industry聽is undergoing a paradigm shift. Previously, R&D was driven by military investment, but it is now driven by聽civilian investment. This affects how technologies are developed, with聽dual-use technologies聽becoming more prevalent on the battlefield and existing technologies combined in novel ways to achieve the desired capabilities.
Convergence of multi-disciplinary technologies, such as information technologies, robotics, artificial intelligence, nanotechnology, and meta-materials, will have a wide variety of civilian and military applications.
鈥淲here previously technologies would mature at glacial speeds due to their development for bespoke applications, the reverse is happening in the commercial sector. The culture of rapid prototyping, testing and iterations combined with private investment has allowed breakneck developments in certain technologies in the industry and academia with which the defence sector can no longer keep pace,鈥 said Ryan Pinto, Industry Analyst, Defence at Frost & Sullivan. 鈥淭hese non-military commercial technologies will have a profound impact on the defence industry over the next two decades, allowing for technologies that have previously stagnated to advance.鈥
Future technological advancements will be increasingly interlinked, wherein the advancements in one technology spur the development of adjacent and complementary technologies.
鈥淎nticipating the future of the armed forces requires the tracking of all these interlinked technologies, as a breakthrough in any technology can have a positive or negative impact on a related technology,鈥 said Pinto. 鈥淎s commercially developed technologies are not dependent on defence funding, they usually cross over into different sectors. These companies may not even be aware of the implications that their technology would have on the defence sector; hence, it is not the technology that determines technological superiority on the battlefield, but rather the doctrine that deploys these technologies that exploits them to their maximum potential.鈥
Frost & Sullivan鈥檚 recent analysis,聽Impact of Future Technologies on the Global Defence Market, 2019鈥2029, assesses which future technologies will impact the defence industry over the next 10 years, what segments will be impacted, what time frames are involved, which countries are researching and developing these technologies and the level of dependency for each technology.
Impact of Future Technologies on the Global Defence Market, 2019鈥2029聽is the latest addition to Frost & Sullivan鈥檚聽顿别蹿别苍肠别听research and analysis available through the Frost & Sullivan Leadership Council, which helps organisations identify a continuous flow of growth opportunities to succeed in an unpredictable future.