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Tech

Drone monitoring firm Blighter gets "significant" loan to help it grow

Radar specialist's products are used by airports and nuclear power stations

Blighter Surveillance Systems Ltd has received funding to help advance its work(Image: Blighter Surveillance Systems Ltd)

A designer and manufacturer of electronic-scanning radars and counter-drone solutions has secured a significant growth capital loan to enable it to grow its work.

Blighter Surveillance Systems Ltd has received a loan from BOOST&CO to advance its solutions, used by airports, nuclear power stations, oil/gas processing plants and other critical national infrastructure sites.

The funding will also allow Blighter, which is based in Great Chesterford, Essex, to improve its supply chain and shorten product lead times for new and existing customers in the global defence and commercial security markets.

Blighter’s technologies are deployed in 35 countries, including, by the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Ministry of Defence in Afghanistan, in South Korea monitoring the demilitarised zone (DMZ), and by the United States Department of Defense in Iraq.

CEO Angus Hone said: “We are delighted to secure this funding as it will enable us to build on record growth and further expand our commercial client base.

“Having adapted our military-grade advanced ground radar and counter-drone solutions for use in the commercial world, we plan to leverage some early successes with airports and other critical infrastructure sites to further grow the business.

“Blighter ground surveillance radars are already successfully deployed at Stansted and Heathrow airports in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and at many other international airports, but we have seen a surge of interest in our counter-drone radars from airports and other critical infrastructure sites in recent years as a result of the growing sightings of rogue drones.

“And our Blighter A400 series air security radar is now deployed at Gatwick as part of the airport’s counter-drone defences following last December’s incident that brought the airport to a standstill.”