Press Release

AV’s LOCUST Demonstrates Landmark Capability at White Sands with JIATF-401 and FAA

05/06/2026

Coordinated test confirms safe, controlled laser engagement of drone targets in complex national airspace

AV’s LOCUST ® high-energy laser system undergoes testing at White Sands Missile Range, demonstrating safe, precise counter-drone capability in coordination with DOW–FAA national airspace validation efforts. (Photo Courtesy of the U.S. Army).
AV’s LOCUST ® high-energy laser system undergoes testing at White Sands Missile Range, demonstrating safe, precise counter-drone capability in coordination with DOW–FAA national airspace validation efforts. (Photo Courtesy of the U.S. Army).

 

ARLINGTON, Va. – May 6, 2026 — AeroVironment, Inc. (“AV”) (NASDAQ: AVAV) today announced a historic milestone for directed energy and homeland defense following the successful execution of a first-of-its-kind counter-unmanned aircraft system (C-UAS) laser test in coordination with the U.S. Department of War and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).

During an early March test event at White Sands Missile Range (WSMR), led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401), AV’s LOCUST® high-energy laser system demonstrated its ability to safely and effectively defend U.S. national airspace against emerging drone threats, directly supporting a subsequent agreement between the DOW and FAA that validates the system for domestic use.

“This is a defining moment for directed energy and for the future of homeland defense,” said John Garrity, Vice President for Directed Energy Systems at AV. “LOCUST has now proven its ability to operate safely and effectively in the most complex airspace environment in the world. This achievement accelerates the transition of directed energy from experimentation to operational deployment—delivering a scalable, cost-effective solution to counter the rapidly growing drone threat.”

The test at WSMR demonstrated automated safety shut-off capabilities that ensure the system only engages validated targets, among other safety features. The testing also showed no adverse impact to civilian aircraft during controlled evaluation scenarios and showed precision engagement through strict positive identification protocols.

AV’s LOCUST also showed the ability to hit both stationary and airborne targets to demonstrate accuracy, persistence, and operational realism.

“This successful test showcases the significant advancements we’re making in counter-drone technology to ensure that our warfighters have the most advanced tools to defend the homeland,” U.S. Army Brigadier General Matt Ross, director of JIATF-401 said recently in a joint Press Release. “By working hand-in-hand with the FAA and our interagency partners, the Department of War is proving that these cutting-edge capabilities are safe, effective, and ready to protect all air travelers from illicit drone use in the national airspace.”

The demonstration at WSMR comes amid increasing urgency to address drone incursions across U.S. airspace. The successful validation of LOCUST underscores its role as a critical layer in a modern, integrated air defense architecture—providing precision engagement, deep magazine capacity, and the ability to defeat threats at the speed of light.

“The FAA’s top priority is protecting the safety of the American flying public, and we value the collaboration with the Department of War in that effort,” FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said in the release. “Following a thorough, data-informed Safety Risk Assessment, we determined that these systems do not present an increased risk to the flying public. We will continue working with our interagency partners to ensure the National Airspace System remains safe while addressing emerging drone threats.”

 AV recently announced LOCUST as a key offering in its new rollout of Halo_Shield™, —a layered, tile-based defense architecture that integrates sensors, battle management, and effectors to identify, detect, track, and defeat evolving aerial threats—positioning the company to help defend critical infrastructure, secure borders, and protect the American public as drone incursions continue to rise across U.S. airspace.

“JIATF-401’s coordination across federal partners was instrumental in aligning operational, safety and regulatory stakeholders for this unprecedented test,” said Mary Clum, President of Space, Cyber and Directed Energy at AV. “PEO Missiles & Space – PAE Fires continues to drive directed energy innovation and fielding, while the FAA’s rigorous safety oversight is enabling the responsible integration of these capabilities into national airspace.”

About AV

AeroVironment (“AV”) (NASDAQ: AVAV) is a defense technology leader delivering integrated capabilities across air, land, sea, space, and cyber. The Company develops and deploys autonomous systems, loitering munitions, counter-UAS technologies, space-based platforms, directed energy systems, and cyber and electronic warfare capabilities—built to meet the mission needs of today’s warfighter and tomorrow’s conflicts. At the core of these technologies lies AV_Halo™, a modular, mission-ready suite of AI-powered software tools that empowers warfighters and enables full-battlefield dominance: detect, decide, deliver. With a national manufacturing footprint and a deep innovation pipeline, AV delivers proven systems and future-defining capabilities at speed, scale, and operational relevance. For more information, visit www.avinc.com.

Safe Harbor Statement

Certain statements in this press release may constitute “forward-looking statements” as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are based on current expectations, forecasts, and assumptions that involve risks and uncertainties, which could cause actual results to differ materially. Factors that may cause such differences include, but are not limited to, our ability to perform under existing contracts and obtain new ones; regulatory changes; competitor activities; market growth; product development challenges; and general economic conditions. For a more detailed discussion of these risks, please refer to AeroVironment’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We undertake no obligation to update forward-looking statements as a result of new information or future events.

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Thought Leadership

We’re Fighting 2026 Drone Swarms with Cold War Architecture. It’s Time to Upgrade.

05/05/2026

Two S-Curves and the Counter-UAS Challenge: How Halo_Shield Was Built on the MAYA Concept

By Paul Webber, Director, Strategic Initiatives, Advanced Defense Solutions, AV

U.S. and allied partners have a problem: new and very real threats from a class of low-cost, autonomous, or semi-autonomous weapons that have disrupted traditional military advantages by imposing exponential costs on legacy Western defense systems. Recent media reports of Iranian Shahed-type attacks on U.S. radar facilities in the Arabian Gulf are but one example.  Shaheds cost tens of thousands of dollars, cheap enough to field at scale by most of adversary nations, and capable of delivering deadly effects. And the threat is worldwide; Russia has launched tens of thousands of long-range drones into Ukraine and are producing hundreds per day.

I’ve spent most of my career working with people whose job is to keep bad things from happening to Americans. For the past several years, I’ve architected counter-drone (C-UAS) solutions at AV. I’m paying attention to the technology paradigm shift in real time, where an S-curve that moves faster and scales wider is putting unprecedented strain on defenses built for a different era.

A useful way to understand this paradigm shift is to view the evolution of air defense as two separate S-curves (measurable growth over time) and recognize that today’s challenge is the growing mismatch between them.

S-curve #1: Traditional Air Defense

This model was designed to protect high-value assets from a limited number of high-end threats. It assumes centralized sensing and command and control (C2), time to build clean tracks, human decision management, and hard-kill interceptors to finish. Inside those assumptions, the traditional model works extremely well. The challenge is that its design assumptions don’t translate cleanly to the problem of mass adversary drones. A radar built to see large, predictable signatures at range is not optimized to find masses of drones with small radar cross sections hugging terrain as they approach our defenses.

The issue is not that the model failed. It did exactly what it was designed to do.

S-curve #2: The UAS Era and Distributed C-UAS

The UAS era flips the math, because low-cost platforms have been fielded at scale, with widely varying signatures, dynamic tactics, and coordinated deployment from saturation to swarming. The shift is not just in complexity, but in volume and velocity. The limiting factor is the speed with which a defense can detect, correlate, decide, and assign effects to mitigate those threats.

Which is where defenses break down.

Defenses don’t fail because they can’t defeat a drone. They fail because they lack counter drone capacity, because operators are saturated, decision timelines stretch, and expensive effects get consumed faster than they can be replenished.

It’s an architectural gap, not a technology gap.

From Problem to Architecture

America’s answer to mass cheap drones can’t be to stretch legacy systems further, which will be neither effector nor affordable. It has to be a rethinking of how we scale and build CUAS capacity.

At AV, that shift is taking shape in Halo_Shield™: a modular, tile-based, distributed C-UAS architecture designed for high-volume environments. Instead of concentrating sensors, decisions, and effectors at a single point, Halo_Shield distributes them across the battlespace. Each Halo_Shield “Tile” functions as a self-contained node, combining sensing, processing, and engagement capabilities at the edge, while contributing to a shared operational picture through AV_Halo, our AI-driven command platform delivering unified, real-time battlespace awareness and control.

This is a fundamental change in how defense is constructed.

Point defense concentrates capability, and it inherits limits. Distributed defense multiplies capability.

By dispersing sensors and effectors, Halo_Shield extends detection timelines, increases engagement opportunities, and builds depth into the fight, enabling attrition before threats ever reach a final engagement window. Just as importantly, it scales without creating new bottlenecks. Each Tile adds capacity, but not complexity.

Where Good Ideas Break Down

There is a hard truth in C-UAS.

Many capable solutions work in demonstration events but fail in deployment because their interfaces are too complex, integration with command-and-control architectures is too fragile, and data overloads operators and slows decisions.

Implementing MAYA: Most Advanced Yet Acceptable

As I continue to watch the S-curve paradigm shift, I keep coming back to a design principle of product innovation: MAYA, Most Advanced Yet Acceptable.

MAYA reminds us that having exquisite technology does not necessarily mean having efficient, effective fieldable systems. Especially in defense, the best solution is the one that can be trusted, trained, integrated, and fielded quickly and repeatedly.

Applied to C-UAS, MAYA means being advanced enough to compress the OODA loop (Observe, Orient, Decide, Act) against scale and speed, while still acceptable enough to fit real operator workflows, rules of engagement constraints, and integration realities.

We’ve all seen the brilliant concept and working demonstration. And then reality shows up: the user experience looks like a cockpit built by committee, the integration requires sequential miracles, the sustainment plan is basically “good luck.” The operator does not trust it, and the system never scales past the pilot.

MAYA forces discipline: innovation must scale operationally, not just technically. And in C-UAS, MAYA is not just philosophy. It is survival.

We developed Halo_Shield around this philosophy.

What MAYA Looks Like in Practice

MAYA isn’t a slogan. It shows up in how systems are built, deployed, and actually used in the field. And the MAYA approach tends to share a few traits.

It starts with progress that can be measured, or stepwise capability growth. Real phases, real metrics, real learning, real measurable outcomes.

It requires clear human-in-the-loop boundaries. Automation should remove friction and compress decision time, not create mystery behavior. Trust is earned one engagement at a time.

It demands simplicity in the form of clean workflows that reduce screens and cognitive load. If the system requires a new operator for every new sensor, you did not scale the system. You scaled the staffing problem.

It depends on architecture that assumes change or what we call “Integration-first Architecture.” Sensors and effectors will evolve faster than legacy C2 cycles. The architecture assumes change as a feature, not a surprise.

Tiles Versus Point Defense: The Distributed Path to Scale

This is where the distributed concept comes in, and it is not as exotic as it sounds.

A traditional point defense site has multiple sensors and effectors applied from a single geographic location. It is usually governed by the sensor with the biggest sensing range and the effector with the longest effective range. This is a valid construct, but it also has a hard limit: finite weapons before reload, finite operator bandwidth, and a tendency to centralize decisions until the system itself becomes the bottleneck.

Distributed defense does not concentrate capacity. It multiplies it.

Halo_Shield’s distributed approach adapts a proven doctrinal idea, area air defense, to the UAS scale problem. We call a geographic area where sensors and effectors are dispersed and not co-located a “Tile.”

Each Tile has edge processing and a C2 interface to manage the mitigation cycle locally while still contributing to a broader operational picture. Tiles are modular by design, combining AV-recommended components with Government-furnished and third-party sensors and effectors, so customers can leverage what they have today and integrate new capabilities as needs evolve.

The practical takeaway is simple: distribution helps elongate detect, track, identify, and defeat to accelerate situational awareness and enable attrition in depth instead of only at the last second. You build Tiles around limited first S-curve air defense sites and increase total system carrying capacity without pretending one point defense site can do it all.

Passive Versus Active: Right Sensor, Right Time, Right Place

Active radar has a place in the mitigation cycle as well. But in a transparent battlefield with long-range precision weapons and shrinking sensor-to-shooter timelines, “radiate all the time everywhere” is not a survivability plan.

A distributed approach like Halo_Shield enables more low- or no-signature, multi-phenomenology sensing such as passive radar, acoustics, and distributable Electro-Optical/Infra-Red (EO/IR), paired with edge computation that limits what must be transmitted to higher echelons.

That reduces bandwidth demand and lowers the risk that central nodes become both overloaded and targetable. It also aligns with first principles. A threat UAS must disturb air to generate lift and move. It must have physical form to carry the technologies that make it a threat. Radio Frequency (RF) detection is valuable when it provides high information value and can support pairing and scheduling, but it is not the only foundation. A signature-centric detection strategy creates an on-ramp for advanced processing and helps reduce latency in high-density environments.

The Bottom Line

This shift in air defense is not just about a new threat. It’s about new requirements: throughput, adaptability, and trust at scale.

MAYA is the discipline that keeps us honest. It forces a simple question: will this be fielded, used, and trusted when the sky gets busy, not just when the demo is clean?

Halo_Shield is the architecture that puts that discipline into practice: not a brittle, centralized stack that collapses under its own weight, but a distributed approach that can grow, integrate, and keep pace.

Together, they move us away from point solutions and toward something more durable: a distributed, scalable, operationally viable defense that delivers value on day one and stays relevant as the fight evolves.

And to be clear, Halo_Shield is not just an upgrade. It’s a shift in how we build defense in the first place, designed for the new S-curve and built to scale with it.

WHAT’S NEXT IN THIS SERIES?

In Part 2, Paul will unpack solutions to the modern C-UAS challenge, including phased introduction of an effective and efficient distributed sensing and effecting architecture, and how leaders can measure C-UAS capacity, and how to move quickly from demo to scale.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Paul Webber is a retired Marine Raider and strategic advisor with two decades of leadership, special operations, and systems analysis experience. He blends operational insight with design thinking to tackle complex defense challenges, particularly in emerging domains like C-UAS. Paul holds an MBA from the University of Georgia, an MS from the Naval Postgraduate School, maintains a Top Secret-SCI clearance, and applies a human-centered lens to technology adoption and workflow design in defense environments.

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ABOUT AV — JOINING THE MISSION

AeroVironment (AV) is a defense technology company with a mission to invent and deliver advantage to U.S. and allied militaries. AV isn’t for everyone. We hire the curious, the relentless, the mission-obsessed.

AV doesn’t just build defense technology; we redefine what’s possible. As the premier autonomous systems company in the U.S., we deliver breakthrough capabilities across air, land, sea, space, and cyber. From autonomy-enabled drones and loitering munitions to integrated autonomy and space resilience, our technologies shape the future of warfare and protect those who serve.

Founded by legendary innovator Dr. Paul MacCready, AV has spent over 50 years pushing the boundaries of what unmanned systems can do. Our heritage includes seven platforms in the Smithsonian—but we’re not building history, we’re building what’s next.

If you’re ready to build technology that matters – with speed, scale, and purpose – come find your people.

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Press Release

AV Announces Halo_Shield™, Comprehensive Tile-Based C-UAS Solution

04/28/2026

Unique, Modular Layered Defense Architecture System Combines the Best of AV and its OEM Suppliers to Protect Critical Asset Locations
Halo Shield
Halo_Shield™ is a modular, tile-based defense that delivers scalable, layered protection to detect, track, and defeat evolving aerial threats across the modern battlespace. (Photo AV)

ARLINGTON, Va. — April 28, 2026 — AeroVironment, Inc. (“AV”) (NASDAQ: AVAV), a global leader in multi-domain defense solutions today announced the release of Halo_Shield™, a modular, distributed, and cost-effective counter-unmanned aircraft system (C-UAS) designed to predict, detect, track, identify and defeat advanced airborne threats—including Group 1–5 UAS, coordinated drone swarms, and subsonic cruise missiles—protecting critical infrastructure and deployed forces worldwide.

AV made the announcement at Modern Day Marine on April 28 at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C.

Developed as part of AV’s holistically integrated C-UAS strategy, Halo_Shield introduces a unique, tile-based layered defense architecture that is open, scalable, and adaptable to today’s evolving threats. The system is designed to support emerging homeland defense priorities by enabling resilient, area-wide protection of high-value U.S. and allied partner assets, including borders, military installations, and other critical infrastructure. AV is currently demonstrating capabilities and has deployed Halo_Shield tiles at select critical sites.

“The character of the air threat has fundamentally changed,” said Wahid Nawabi, Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer at AV. “Cheap, massed, and coordinated aerial systems are stressing traditional point defenses. Halo_Shield is our answer—a collaborative, modular approach that brings together the best of AV and a trusted supplier ecosystem to close those gaps.”

At the core of Halo_Shield is a mission-tailored, distributed and domain-specific tile architecture—comprising Sentinel, Terrestrial, Nautical, Aerial and Celestial tiles. Each tile delivers a specialized combination of sensors, effectors, and command-and-control capabilities, drawing on technology from AV and its trusted ecosystem of suppliers. The result is a cost-efficient defense architecture that is offense-ready, extends protection beyond point defense and sustains decisive situational advantage in contested battlespaces across air, land, sea and space.

Designed for plug-and-play integration, Halo_Shield is deployable as portable fly-away kits and integrates seamlessly with existing customer sensors, effectors, and command-and-control frameworks—delivering scalable, resilient, area-wide protection with minimal training and personnel demands. Powered by AV_Halo™, AV’s unified software platform, the system is purpose-built yet agnostic, designed to incorporate new capabilities while seamlessly integrating with customers’ existing command-and-control systems.

“Halo_Shield is engineered like an edge processing-capable set of tiles for modern air defense,” said Larry Lloyd, Senior Vice President of Strategic Initiatives at AV. “Each tile is a self-contained capability that can operate on its own or snap together to build exactly the defense architecture a mission demands. That modularity lets operators scale, adapt, and reconfigure in real time as threats evolve, without redesigning the system or retraining the force. It’s how you move from static point defense to a living, mission-tailored shield.”

The unique tile-based architecture integrates a tailored mix of sensors and effectors from AV and its trusted partners, unified by an overarching battle manager. It includes systems such as AV’s LOCUST® laser weapon system, Switchblade® loitering munitions, and Titan® 4 and Titan MS RF C-UAS systems, among others.

With AV_Halo™ COMMAND, each tile can operate independently or be rapidly combined to extend detection ranges, accelerate the kill chain, and expand coverage across large geographic areas for preferential engagement.

Halo_Shield is a game-changing architecture:

  • Affordably extending defensive protection beyond traditional C-UAS point defense
  • Optimizing sensors and effectors placement to maximize mission effectiveness
  • Maximizing the system’s weapons carrying capacity to address all threat scenarios
  • Disaggregating the C-UAS mitigation cycle at the tile level to simplify higher echelon command and control (C2) workload
  • Integrating left of launch with offensive delivery to thwart threats prior to attack

More information about each tile, Sentinel, Terrestrial, Nautical, Aerial and Celestial, will be released in upcoming announcements.

About AV

AeroVironment (“AV”) (NASDAQ: AVAV) is a defense technology leader delivering integrated capabilities across air, land, sea, space, and cyber. The Company develops and deploys autonomous systems, loitering munitions, counter-UAS technologies, space-based platforms, directed energy systems, and cyber and electronic warfare capabilities—built to meet the mission needs of today’s warfighter and tomorrow’s conflicts. At the core of these technologies lies AV_Halo™, a modular, mission-ready suite of AI-powered software tools that empowers warfighters and enables full-battlefield dominance: detect, decide, deliver. With a national manufacturing footprint and a deep innovation pipeline, AV delivers proven systems and future-defining capabilities at speed, scale, and operational relevance. For more information, visit www.avinc.com.

Safe Harbor Statement

Certain statements in this press release may constitute “forward-looking statements” as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are based on current expectations, forecasts, and assumptions that involve risks and uncertainties, which could cause actual results to differ materially. Factors that may cause such differences include, but are not limited to, our ability to perform under existing contracts and obtain new ones; regulatory changes; competitor activities; market growth; product development challenges; and general economic conditions. For a more detailed discussion of these risks, please refer to AeroVironment’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We undertake no obligation to update forward-looking statements as a result of new information or future events.

/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

For additional media and information, please follow us:

Media Contact:

BJ Koubaroulis
pr@avinc.com

703.718.4060

Investor Contact:

Denise Pacioni

ir@avinc.com

805.795.4108

 

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Halo_Shield™

04/27/2026

Let’s Advance Your Mission

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