Parsons Corporation and counter-drone technology company DroneShield say they have completed a counter-uncrewed aircraft systems (C-UAS) demonstration aimed at showing how interoperable technologies can be used to detect, track and respond to drone threats.
DroneShield said it provided drone detection, electronic warfare and mitigation capabilities within Parsons’ DroneArmor command-and-control environment. The companies said the exercise focused on integrating sensing, command-and-control and counter-drone tools in a shared operating environment, with an emphasis on open architectures that allow technologies from multiple providers to work together.
The demonstration comes as governments, critical infrastructure operators and other security stakeholders face increasing concern over unauthorised drones, including risks to airspace safety, perimeter security and operational continuity. Industry has increasingly pushed for systems that can integrate across sensors and effectors, rather than rely on single-vendor stacks.
DroneShield director of strategic projects Nate Webb said the demonstration was intended to highlight interoperability and open architectures that enable customers to combine different capabilities into counter-drone deployments and adjust configurations as requirements change.
DroneShield said its products are designed to integrate with a range of command-and-control systems, sensors and mitigation technologies to support layered counter-drone deployments.

