Vue normale

Aujourd’hui — 19 juillet 2025Flux principal
  • ✇Euromaidan Press
  • NYP: How small Ukrainian factories are building drones that hunt Russian crafts — without draining millions
    Ukrainian factories building drones to down Russian aircraft are changing the face of modern air defense — one low-cost interceptor at a time. On 18 July, the New York Post published a reportage about its journalists visiting two drone production facilities in Kyiv. The publication got an inside look at how Ukraine is confronting drone warfare with ingenuity and affordability. Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, Moscow continues launching daily drone strikes against Ukrainian cities, often dep
     

NYP: How small Ukrainian factories are building drones that hunt Russian crafts — without draining millions

19 juillet 2025 à 04:54

nyp how small ukrainian factories building drones hunt russian crafts — without draining millions nomad co-founder ceo andrii fedorov pictured interceptor drone inside company’s production facility kyiv new york post

Ukrainian factories building drones to down Russian aircraft are changing the face of modern air defense — one low-cost interceptor at a time. On 18 July, the New York Post published a reportage about its journalists visiting two drone production facilities in Kyiv. The publication got an inside look at how Ukraine is confronting drone warfare with ingenuity and affordability.

Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, Moscow continues launching daily drone strikes against Ukrainian cities, often deploying hundreds of Iranian-designed Shahed explosive drones to target civilians. Each Shahed can carry up to 90 kg of explosives. With limited access to foreign air defense systems, Ukraine has focused on developing and scaling up production of interceptor drones to counter Russia’s growing Shahed onslaught.

Kyiv engineers race to scale drone interceptors

The New York Post says Nomad Drones and a second, anonymous company are leading a new surge in Ukrainian factories building drones. These interceptors are crafted specifically to neutralize Russian-launched Shaheds, which cost around $50,000 apiece. Meanwhile, Ukraine’s new models are dramatically cheaper — priced between $3,000 and $7,000, depending on type and size.

Nomad Drones co-founder and CEO Andrii Fedorov explained the concept to the NYP.

“In Ukraine, there is a phrase people have been using — that ‘quantity’ becomes ‘quality,’” he said.

According to Fedorov, deploying a $1 million missile to destroy a $50,000 drone makes no economic sense.

“If you have 20 drones, then the capacity costs you, say, $40,000 to shoot it down.”

Cost-effective jamming-proof drones

Nomad’s aircraft are designed for cost-effective lethality. Equipped with fiber-optic cables, they avoid jamming and reach enemy drones undetected by radars. Each unit carries explosives and can be detonated remotely on approach. That ability is critical against fast-moving targets like Shaheds, often launched in swarms across Ukrainian airspace.

A second firm — unnamed in the report due to repeated Russian strikes on its facility — builds a meter-long missile-style interceptors. That company continues operating despite multiple attacks.

“It’s all about cost-effectiveness,” an employee said. “Western technologies are so cool and modern — they are expensive at the same time.”

Built for war, priced for survival

The strategy centers on affordability, speed, and scalable output. Nomad Drones and others now produce tens of thousands of interceptors monthly. These low-cost systems are not meant to endure — they’re made to fly once, explode midair, and protect civilian lives.

Tis model contrasts sharply with existing Western air defense systems, which rely heavily on expensive precision strikes. With Russia launching over 700 drones in a single night last week, Ukrainian engineers have prioritized high-volume production as the only viable path forward.

Ukrainian-made drones may soon bolster US forces trailing China in tech. As the NYP reported earlier, Ukraine’s president confirmed a “mega deal” under discussion with the Trump administration to trade battle-tested UAVs for American weapons.
You could close this page. Or you could join our community and help us produce more materials like this. We keep our reporting open and accessible to everyone because we believe in the power of free information. This is why our small, cost-effective team depends on the support of readers like you to bring deliver timely news, quality analysis, and on-the-ground reports about Russia's war against Ukraine and Ukraine's struggle to build a democratic society. Become a patron or see other ways to support
❌
❌