Ukrainian arms maker Fire Point is developing a new air defense system called Freya together with Europe, positioning it as a lower-cost alternative to the US’s MIM-104 Patriot system, the company’s co-owner and CEO Denys Shtilerman said on Monday.
Shtilerman, speaking at a parliamentary hearing, said the project aims to create an air defense system capable of intercepting ballistic missiles. He said the program is currently in the testing phase for prototype systems.
“If everything goes well, we will have the first interceptions by the end of the year,” Shtilerman said.
The Patriot system is central to Ukraine’s defense against Russia’s high-speed missiles, but US supplies are strained by the war in Iran.
According to a senior Ukrainian Air Force officer in March, up to eight missiles were fired to take down a single Iranian drone in the Middle East, compared with one or two against Russian missiles in Ukraine.
Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense described the latest generation PAC-3 missile – estimated to cost around $4 million per unit – as “the most effective interceptor” against advanced Russian missiles in a press release.
Shtilerman described Freya as a joint European project involving Germany, France, and Norway. He said Rustem Umerov, secretary of Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council (RNBO), is coordinating the program on the Ukrainian side.
Shtilerman said the project operates through intergovernmental agreements that allow defense manufacturers to sign separate contracts to produce individual components of the system.
According to him, Freya is financed by participating companies, while intergovernmental agreements provide mechanisms for sharing technologies between countries.
Shtilerman said another Ukrainian company is involved in the project besides Fire Point, but did not disclose the name.
Shtilerman first presented the concept for the pan-European Freya air defense system on May 14. The system is based on the FP-7 interceptor missile, built from composite materials and capable of speeds between 1,500 and 2,000 meters per second (4,920-6,560 feet per second).
The missile is equipped with a semi-active infrared seeker, which Ukrainian engineers plan to create in cooperation with Diehl Defence, the German manufacturer behind the IRIS air defense system.
Potential radar systems for Freya include the Saab Giraffe 8A, Saab Giraffe 4A, Ground Master 400 and TRML-4D.
The system is also expected to integrate into Ukraine’s existing air and missile defense network using NATO’s Link-16 protocol.
In March, President Volodymyr Zelensky said Kyiv is negotiating with two unnamed countries to source alternatives to the US-made PAC-3 Patriot air defense missiles.
Zelensky told reporters that he would reveal details only once they were finalized.
“We are negotiating with two countries to make this possible. But when there is a result, then I will say it frankly. And Ukrainians need to know that we need to do everything for our defense industry, everything to the maximum, so that we have our own systems, anti-ballistic systems,” Zelensky said.
It is unclear if Zelensky was referring to Freya at the time.