Government Grant
Innovation for Defence Excellence and Security (IDEaS) program | Counter Uncrewed Aerial Systems Sandbox 2026
What IDEaS provides
- Up to five days of your free, personal full-time use of our fully equipped Counter Uncrewed Aerial Systems (CUAS) test range including targets.
- On-site one-on-one continual interaction with Canadian Armed Forces (CAF), United States (US) Government - Irregular Warfare Technical Support Directorate (IWTSD), Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) end-users, and science experts.
- Iterative testing and demonstration to improve your technology.
- Feedback from CAF to customize and adjust your test plan on the fly.
- $1.75 million in monetary prizes for promising technologies.
What innovators bring
- Advanced prototypes capable of detecting and/or defeating our Micro and Mini UAS.
- Your A game to beat our Red Team drones.
- 4.5/5.0
- National Defence
- All levels
- Last updated 1 week ago
- English
Description
What IDEaS provides
- Up to five days of your free, personal full-time use of our fully equipped Counter Uncrewed Aerial Systems (CUAS) test range including targets.
- On-site one-on-one continual interaction with Canadian Armed Forces (CAF), United States (US) Government - Irregular Warfare Technical Support Directorate (IWTSD), Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) end-users, and science experts.
- Iterative testing and demonstration to improve your technology.
- Feedback from CAF to customize and adjust your test plan on the fly.
- $1.75 million in monetary prizes for promising technologies.
What innovators bring
- Advanced prototypes capable of detecting and/or defeating our Micro and Mini UAS.
- Your A game to beat our Red Team drones.
What IDEaS provides
- Up to five days of your free, personal full-time use of our fully equipped Counter Uncrewed Aerial Systems (CUAS) test range including targets.
- On-site one-on-one continual interaction with Canadian Armed Forces (CAF), United States (US) Government - Irregular Warfare Technical Support Directorate (IWTSD), Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) end-users, and science experts.
- Iterative testing and demonstration to improve your technology.
- Feedback from CAF to customize and adjust your test plan on the fly.
- $1.75 million in monetary prizes for promising technologies.
What innovators bring
- Advanced prototypes capable of detecting and/or defeating our Micro and Mini UAS.
- Your A game to beat our Red Team drones.
The challenge
Building on the results of the 2024 CUAS Sandbox, the Department of National Defence (DND) and the CAF and their defence and security partners (RCMP, Public Safety, etc.) are seeking CUAS solutions capable of detecting and/or defeating Micro and Mini UAS with systems that can be integrated into the broader military command and control systems.
As was done in 2024, Sandbox prizes will be awarded for the top three “Diamond in the rough” solutions.
Background and context
The UAS landscape is rapidly evolving. The rapid increase of availability, affordability, complexity, and capabilities of UAS systems continues to pose increasing threats to the DND/CAF and our defence and security partners. Potential adversaries are also adapting UAS designs to evade current CUAS capabilities, by reducing the UAS visibility, minimizing radio-frequency emissions, increasing autonomy, operating at higher velocities, etc., thus rendering the current CUAS approaches obsolete. Proposed solutions to this challenge should take into account not only what is available and a threat today, but also emerging UAS and CUAS capabilities and how they might be detected, defeated, and/or exploited tomorrow.
CUAS was identified as one of the priorities in Canada’s 2017 defence policy Strong, Secure, Engaged (SSE) which stated: “As the development of remotely piloted systems increases… Canada will require the appropriate capabilities to identify and defend against these burgeoning threats.” (page 73).
Due to the importance of this challenge, the CAF is in the process of establishing a strategic level Joint CUAS Office (JCO) for coordinating with the Canadian Army (CA), Royal Canadian Navy (RCN), Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF), Canadian Special Operations Forces Command (CANSOFCOM), and our allies and partners. The information presented in this CUAS challenge represents a blending of characteristics of interest to one or more of the services, as well as the RCMP.
The following CAF projects have a direct interest in CUAS systems and the results of this challenge:
- Canadian Forces Land Electronic Warfare Modernization (CFLEWM). CFLEWM is upgrading the Army’s Mobile Electronic Warfare Teams in Light and Armoured platforms. While dedicated CUAS capabilities are out of scope for CFLEWM, a beneficial outcome would be to understand how multi-role EW Sense and Attack capabilities can contribute to the CUAS fight, and how dedicated CUAS sensors could be integrated into the EW sensor network.
- Land Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Modernization (Land ISR Mod). Land ISR Mod is investigating capabilities that can provide sensor systems for the purposes of targeting. This project is mandated under SSE Initiative #42 and is funded. This project is in Options Analysis transitioning to Definition.
- Counter Uncrewed Aerial Systems (CUAS). A specific CUAS initiative is investigating CUAS systems capable of defending critical infrastructure, vehicles, and personnel from Micro and Mini UAS. This project is not funded at this time, and consequently an intended date for any future procurement cannot yet be stated.
CUAS outcomes
Essential outcomes
Aside from addressing the challenge in an overall sense, there are no specific detailed essential challenge outcomes at this time.
Desirable outcomes: Integration into an external command and control system
DND/CAF is open to receiving all types of solutions with variable outcomes that are not restricted to the list in the Applicant Guide; however, the desirable outcomes on the list are of particular interest and solutions that address these in whole or in part have an increased likelihood of being selected to attend the 2026 CUAS Sandbox.
Operational scenarios
The UAS threats occur in a variety of operational scenarios, six of which are of specific interest to defend against. It is desirable that a solution addresses as many of these as possible, each to the maximum extent possible, in both day and night conditions:
- Operating base. Defending a Forward Operating Base (FOB), airfield, or VIP conference location in which a CUAS system can be in a static location once deployed, and where equipment size and power consumption is not a major issue. The perimeter of the area to be defended is a circle with a 2.5 km radius. The combined location and quantity of the systems used must be located within that circle with an effective range extending beyond that perimeter in all directions to prevent the UAS from approaching the perimeter. The capability to distinguish authorized and non-authorized aircraft, drones, and other objects in the airspace is relevant.
- Mobile vehicle. Defending a mobile vehicle force element such as a patrol of five vehicles, in which the CUAS system must be vehicle-mounted and powered for mobility, creating a defensive bubble around the vehicles while on the move.
- Dismounted personnel. Defending a small element of 12 dismounted soldiers or a VIP group in an isolated location, in which case the CUAS system and its power source must be “Person Portable”. Ideally also operating while the group is on the move, creating a defensive bubble around the group.
- Urban environment. Operating in urban scenarios such as complex and cluttered infrastructure, obstacles, and electromagnetic environments. The area to be defended is a major city downtown location and a square of 4 x 4 city blocks, with office towers up to 10 stories high on some or all the blocks to be defended.
- Naval environment. Defending an RCN frigate sized ship that is (i) underway in littoral waters that vary from large straits to confined entries to harbours; and (ii) alongside a dock or anchored in a harbour. The equipment will have to contend with obstacles such as the ship's superstructure, the unique electromagnetic environment surrounding the ship, the various speeds and movements of a ship, a variety of coastal, urban, and port landscapes, and it will have to withstand prolonged exposure to the marine salt environment.
- Monitoring and defending a linear border. Such borders are relevant to military front lines of combat and to geo-political boundaries and can be many kilometres in length. For the purposes of relative resource and capability comparisons amongst different solutions, for any one system, how many are required at what spacing to provide a CUAS capability along a 10-kilometer straight line border?
CUAS methodologies
The general methodologies for achieving CUAS effects can be characterized as:
- Active detection, in which the CUAS system is transmitting a signal in order to detect the UAS (such as radar), which has the disadvantage of potentially revealing the location of the transmitter, depending on the technology used.
- Passive detection, which conceals our own position and relies on detecting the UAS from effects it generates (such as visual detection, electronic signatures, audible noise, etc.).
- Soft-kill neutralization, using means such as radiofrequency effects or other methods to deter, disable, take over, or otherwise mitigate the UAS.
- Hard-kill neutralization, using ammunition, nets, entanglers, missiles, lasers, microwave devices, or other means to physically disable the UAS.
Areas of CAF CUAS interest
DND/CAF is open to receiving all types of solutions, however technologies and concepts that are new, different, and have an unknown future potential will be of higher interest relative to technologies and concepts that are largely duplicating other existing similar solutions.
Utilization of a method that is substantively different than any other means of detecting and defeating drones, such that it would fill a niche in a layered CUAS approach of multiple capabilities. Current known methods include but are not limited to:
Detect:
- Radar
- Acoustic
- Radio Frequency (RF) Signal
- Optical
Defeat:
- RF Jamming and Cyber
- Nets
- Small arms ballistic projectiles
Selection emphasis in the following technology areas can be expected, provided their performance is relevant. Even if these technology areas are previously known, improvements in these areas are of interest:
- Hard-kill solutions, particularly proximity munitions, and directed energy such as lasers and microwaves.
- Beyond line-of-sight capability.
- Networks of low-cost sensors.
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