Yelabuga drone factory
The Yelabuga drone factory is an unmanned aerial vehicle and loitering munition factory in the Alabuga Special Economic Zone, near Yelabuga, Republic of Tatarstan, Russia, operated by the Russian company Albatross. It develops drones for military use in the Russian invasion of Ukraine. OverviewThe manufacturing plant develops Shahed-style loitering munitions[1] and "Albatross" reconnaissance drones.[2] It is located in the Alabuga Special Economic Zone, near Yelabuga, Repbulic of Tatarstan, Russia, more than 1,300km from the Ukraine-Russia border.[1] Within the Special Economic Zone, the drones are reportedly referred to as "boats" (Russian: лодок).[3] "Big boat" refers to the Shahed-136, called the "Geran-2" in Russian service, while "small boat" refers to the Shahed 131, called the "Geran-1" in Russian service.[4] The project as a whole has been called "Project Boat."[5] Other code words used by engineers include "bumpers" to refer to explosive payloads, and "Ireland" or "Belarus" to refer to Iran.[5] The agreement between Iran and Russia has been describe as a franchise by The Washington Post, in which Iran shares project documentation, locally produced or reverse-engineered components, and technical knowledge.[4] The facility was built near the Kama River, allowing direct transportation via ship directly from Iran through the Caspian Sea.[6][2] The plant was built with materials provided by Iran.[7] The plant is operated by Albatross, a Russian company that previously made agricultural technologies,[2] and now produces drones for use in the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[7] Albatross has developed long-range reconnaissance drones for use in the war, called "Albatross" or "Albatros M5" drones.[2][8] Before and during the plant's development, Iran supplied loitering munitions for Russia to use in the invasion of Ukraine.[9][10][11] The factory opened in July 2023.[2] Russia initially intended to build 6,000 drones by summer 2025[12] at a rate of 310 drones per month, operating the factory 24 hours a day.[6] Following that, Russia planned to produce an additional 6,000 Shahed attack drones per year, in addition to surveillance drones.[13] It predicted the cost of production of one Geran-2 would be US$48,000, or 25% of the cost to purchase.[6] By April 2024, Western sources reported the plant had already produced 4,500 Shahed drones,[14][13] and that, due to upgrades, the cost of production per unit has increased to around US$80,000.[15] Russian soldiers are trained to operate the drones in Syria by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah,[13] each designated terrorist organizations by several nations.[16][17][18][note 1] EmploymentLeaked documents showed Alabuga has struggled to staff the factory. The initial plan included hosting 810 staff members working in three shifts to operate the manufactory 24 hours a day.[4][6] However, the staff lacked expertise in various aspects of drone development. Consequently, numerous employees, including managers, engineers, students, and manual labourers, have travelled to Iranian drone manufactories for training. By the end of spring 2023, 200 employees and 100 students had been trained at Iranian centres.[4] In an effort to recruit girls and women ages 16 to 22, Alabuga advertised subsidized housing and a wage starting at $550 a month.[4] Due to employee discomfort in building weapons for the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Alabuga has since increased salaries. Some employees working at the drone manufactory earn ten times the median Russian wage.[4] Management have also seized passports to prevent people from quitting.[4] In July 2023, an investigation revealed the factory employs students as young as 15 of Alabuga Polytech, a branch of the Yelabuga Polytechnic College. As of August 2023, the factory had several hundred students employed.[19] The students were promised a job and a locally competitive salary of up to 70,000 rubles (US$700) per month for a work experience program. Instead, students enrolled were forced into working at the drone facility,[4] where their salaries are contingent on meeting production quotas, sometimes working 15 hours shifts without overtime pay, and "often without proper breaks or meals, and under hostile conditions that have deeply affected their mental health."[19] School staff instructed students not to tell their parents about the drone assembly work,[19] or they would be fined 1.5 million to 2 million rubles, per their employment contract with Alabuga Polytech.[20] Russian businessmen have been advertising and recruiting in Africa for the drone factory, specifically targeting girls and women.[13] The Wall Street Journal reported one event in which the businessmen rented a hall at a school in Kampala, the capital of Uganda, to pitch employment opportunities to young female students. The pitch advertised a work-study program for skilled labour, offering a wage triple what the women would earn in Uganda, free accommodations, and a university diploma. The Wall Street Journal also reported the tone and message of the work-study pitches were intended to be anti-colonial, "echoing some of the language of the Cold War and reflecting Russia’s attempts to use soft power to dilute Western influence in East Africa."[13] According to Ugandan officials, over 1,000 women from across Africa have gone to the Special Economic Zone, predicting a further 1,000 would join in 2024.[13] Drone developmentStarting in January 2023, the plan for the drone factory was to implement production in three phases: The first phase was to reassemble (as knock-down kits) 100 drones per month, imported from Iran. The second phase would include the drone factory producing its own airframes (the drones' hollow bodies). The third phase would include producing another 4,000 drones by September 2025 with little assistance from Iran.[4] During the first phase, Russia reported that around 25% of drones shipped from Iran were damaged or inoperable.[4] Iranian Shahed-136Leaked data provided by Iran to Russia indicated that 90% of an Iranian Shahed-136's computer chips and electrical components are manufactured in the West, primarily in the United States.[4] The components are sold as civilian products. The American companies that produce these components include Texas Instruments, Analog Devices, and Xilinx, a company acquired in 2022 by AMD.[4] Without further elaboration, a leaked document listed supplies available in Russia and indicated that Mouser and DigiKey could be potential suppliers for components.[4] The Shahed-136 is powered by a Mado MD550 engine made by Mado, based on a German Limbach Flugmotoren L550E engine illicitly obtained by Iran.[4] An investigation submitted by Ukraine to the G7 in September 2023 revealed Shahed drones are built with commercially available parts sold by companies headquartered in the United States, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Germany, Canada, Japan, and Poland.[21] The document suggested there is no deliberate wrongdoing on the part of the companies, and that, due to the commercial availability of the parts, the parts are simply poorly regulated or are uncontrolled. The document also reported the components are imported to Iran from Turkey, India, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Vietnam and Costa Rica.[21] Russian Geran-2In July 2023, Albatross's co-founder, Ilya Voronkov, said in interviews that 70% of its drones' components are made in Russia, while other parts such as the engine are from China. Albatross's website advertises cameras, electronics, and other equipment from European, US, and Asian companies.[2] US officials later reported China had supplied Russia with military hardware in addition to optics, microelectronics and other dual-use materials that could be used in drones. Ukraine reported that Russia sourced engines for their attack drones from the Chinese company called Beijing MicroPilot UAV Flight Control Systems.[13] Other supplies are provided by Iranian front companies often based in places like Hong Kong or Dubai.[14] The airframe is constructed from materials provided by Russian and Belarusian companies. A sample of a material used to make the wings was provided by the Chinese company Metastar to the drone manufactory.[4] Since production has commenced at the drone factory in Yelabuga, Russian engineers have replaced both glue and Chinese electronics deemed inadequate, and have waterproofed and redesigned the airframe.[4] Russia has also begun producing its own warheads.[14] Further improvements underway include an effort to make the Geran-2s capable of swarm strikes, in which the drones autonomously coordinate an attack on a target.[4] HistoryShahed drones were previously built by Shahed Aviation Industries in Iran, where, allegedly, every drone manufactory has two backup sites in the event of an aerial attack at one site.[6] In December 2022, the Biden administration publicly accused Iran and Russia of moving to cooperate in the construction of a drone manufacturing plant in Russia.[22] In June 2023, the White House released a U.S. intelligence report revealing Iran was supplying Russia with materials to construct the drone manufactory, predicting it would be fully operational by early 2024.[23] Photo and video evidence from Russian social media indicated Albatross commenced some reconnaissance drone production in January 2023.[2] In September 2023, during the seventy-eighth session of the United Nations General Assembly, the United States directly accused Iran of both supplying Russia with drones during the invasion of Ukraine, and of assisting Russia with the development of a drone manufacturing plant. Despite mounting evidence, president of Iran Ebrahim Raisi denied sending drones for use in the invasion, responding, "We are against the war in Ukraine."[24] Iran had also said it provided drones to Russia only before the start of the war.[25] Russia has also dismissed reports of it working with Iran, saying Russia relies on its own research and development.[26] The Ukrainian report to G7, submitted in August 2023, further detailed the Iranian government was trying to "disassociate itself from providing Russia with weapons" and that "[Iran] cannot cope with Russian demand and the intensity of use in Ukraine."[21] US officials determined that Iran continues to supply the Russian military with suicide drones, having shipped hundreds by May 2023, shipping them from the Amirabad Special Economic Zone and Port, Iran to Makhachkala, Russia.[25] On 2 April 2024, the drone factory was struck by an improvised drone apparently adapted from a civilian light aircraft, likely an Aeroprakt A-22. Ukraine's military intelligence said the strike "caused significant destruction of production facilities."[1] Local governor Rustam Minnikhanov said the attack brought no serious damage or disruption to production.[27][1] Russian media reported a nearby workers' dormitory was damaged, with 12 injured.[28][29] See alsoNotes
References
|