New Photo - Analysis-Sliding US rig count outpaces efficiency gains, threatening onshore oil output

AnalysisSliding US rig count outpaces efficiency gains, threatening onshore oil output Georgina McCartneyAugust 5, 2025 at 4:06 AM By Georgina McCartney HOUSTON (Reuters) The falling number of oil and gas rigs deployed across the United States is reaching a level that would indicate onshore crude ou...

- - Analysis-Sliding US rig count outpaces efficiency gains, threatening onshore oil output

Georgina McCartneyAugust 5, 2025 at 4:06 AM

By Georgina McCartney

HOUSTON (Reuters) -The falling number of oil and gas rigs deployed across the United States is reaching a level that would indicate onshore crude output from the world's top producer could fall in early 2026.

U.S. energy companies are producing record amounts of oil, much of it from onshore shale fields. New techniques and technology, like longer lateral wells, automation and more powerful equipment, have driven productivity gains across the industry that have allowed oil companies to pump more with fewer rigs and less capital.

But the number of rigs working in U.S. shale fields has almost fallen so low - and is projected to keep falling - that those improvements will not be enough to keep onshore U.S. production rising, or even steady in some basins, analysts say.

The anticipated decline comes as U.S. President Donald Trump seeks to raise oil and gas output, and as OPEC+ lifts its production targets in an attempt to take back market share from the U.S. and other rival producers.

In April 2019, the last time over 1,000 rigs were consistently deployed across the U.S., oil output stood at 12.14 million barrels per day (bpd). Today, there are just 540 rigs in operation, while output has jumped to some 13.5 million bpd.

Those close to the industry say that balance is fast approaching a tipping point, with analysts forecasting the rig count to fall further and U.S. onshore production to subsequently decline next year and into 2027.

Lower 48 oil output is expected to fall by 200,000 bpd next year, followed by a further decline of 130,000 bpd in 2027, as operators drop rigs in response to persistently low oil prices, Wood Mackenzie analysts said.

At the current rig count of 540, energy analytics firm, Novi Labs forecasts a 400,000 bpd drop in lower 48 production by the end of next year, with losses upwards of 200,000 bpd within the first few months of 2026.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration in July also said it expects recent declines in rig counts and well completions to continue, pointing to lower crude prices.

The recent decline in oil prices has prompted companies to shed rigs at an elevated rate. In the Permian basin - the largest U.S. oil field, spanning from Texas to New Mexico - some 24 rigs were dropped over a ten-week period beginning in May, according to energy services firm Baker Hughes. During that period, prices plunged as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries accelerated plans to increase output.

Companies have been using newer, more efficient oil rigs, with improvements like autonomous drilling capabilities, more powerful horsepower, and technology that enables them to move without being taken down and rebuilt.

"Right now virtually all operating rigs are the most efficient and highly upgraded rigs available. Drillers saw big efficiency gains because they upgraded to a bigger rig but there are no bigger rigs left to upgrade to," said Paul Mosvold, president and COO of Scandrill, whose company has seven rigs in the Haynesville and four in the Permian.

"Now it is incremental and tweaking, whereas before it was a wholesale upgrade. Those things aren't going to make the level of efficiency gains we've seen in the last few years," Mosvold added.

Energy consultancies have similar estimates for the number of rigs needed to keep production steady in the Permian Basin, ranging between 240 and 260.

The Permian rig count last fell by one in the week to August 1, to 259, the lowest since September 2021, according to Baker Hughes.

"We have seen a 25% improvement over the last few years in rig efficiency, but the rig count has fallen over 30% over that same period. Put simply, the rig count declines have begun to outpace drilling efficiency gains," said Brandon Myers, head of research at Novi Labs.

"This is a recent development," he added.

Market intelligence firm Energy Aspects expects the Permian rig count to continue falling, slipping below its own modeled 255 threshold for steady production, early next year. Consultancy Wood Mackenzie sees that basin's rig count falling to 245 in early 2026 as prices fall due to higher OPEC+ output.

The Permian has been at the heart of the U.S. shale revolution, propelling the country to the top spot in the league of global oil producers. Output there is expected to reach 6.58 million bpd this month, more than triple what it produced a decade ago in August 2015, according to the EIA.

In the Permian's Midland basin, oil companies have raised the number of feet drilled per month per rig, or drilling efficiency, by 25% since the first quarter of 2023, according to Novi Labs. In 2024 around 40% of laterals in Midland were over 2.5 miles long, compared with 15% in 2021.

Despite improvements to drilling technologies, oil wells in the Permian basin are becoming less productive as operators have drilled through a lot of the best rock. Those less productive wells cost more to drill and are producing more unwanted byproducts such as gas and water, and less oil.

The Permian's Delaware and Midland sub-basins have seen oil per foot drilled fall 8% so far in 2025 compared with last year's average, Morgan Stanley analysts said in a July note.

"If the rig count drops don't turn around soon, we're going to see U.S. production declines well into 2026, including in the Permian basin," said Energy Aspects analyst Jesse Jones. He anticipates Permian production, which currently stands at 6.55 million bpd, to fall by 150,000 bpd to 6.25 million bpd in 2026, due to fewer rigs and completions as well as a degradation in well productivity.

Declines in oil production as a result of a falling rig count will take six to nine months to show, due to the time it takes to drill and complete wells, analysts said.

Novi Labs expects Permian production will fall slightly by the end of the year, before dipping into the sub-6.5 million bpd range in the first quarter of 2026. Meanwhile, Wood Mackenzie sees Permian output growth flattening in 2026 at 6.55 million bpd. The EIA projects output to average 6.53 million bpd in 2025, before edging down to 6.5 million bpd in 2026.

"In 2020, when the rig count fell, operators drilled the best rock they were ever going to have. That high-quality inventory doesn't exist in that quantity anymore, and operators won't be able to do that again to the same degree," said Novi Labs' Myers.

(Reporting by Georgina McCartney in Houston, additional reporting by Arathy Somasekhar; Editing by Liz Hampton and Nick Zieminski)

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Analysis-Sliding US rig count outpaces efficiency gains, threatening onshore oil output

AnalysisSliding US rig count outpaces efficiency gains, threatening onshore oil output Georgina McCartneyAugust 5,...
New Photo - A shipwreck off Yemen has killed 56 migrants and left 132 missing, UN says in revised figures

A shipwreck off Yemen has killed 56 migrants and left 132 missing, UN says in revised figures SAMY MAGDY August 5, 2025 at 4:10 AM This is a locator map for Yemen with its capital, Sanaa.

- - A shipwreck off Yemen has killed 56 migrants and left 132 missing, UN says in revised figures

SAMY MAGDY August 5, 2025 at 4:10 AM

This is a locator map for Yemen with its capital, Sanaa. (AP Photo) ()

CAIRO (AP) — A boat carrying African migrants that capsized over the weekend off the coast of war-torn Yemen killed 56 and left 132 missing, the U.N. immigration agency said Tuesday, revising casualty figures released earlier.

It is the latest in a series of shipwrecks off Yemen that killed hundreds trying to reach wealthy Arab Gulf countries in the hope of a better life.

The vessel had 200 people on board when it sank early Sunday off the coastal town of Shuqrah in Yemen's southern province of Abyan, the International Organization for Migration said in a statement. Authorities recovered 56 bodies, including 14 women, while 12 men were rescued as of Tuesday morning, the agency said.

An operation to find those missing is underway, Abyan security directorate said late Monday, adding that the body of the boat captain, a Yemeni citizen, was recovered among 14 others off Zinjibar, the provincial capital.

"This heartbreaking incident highlights the urgent need to address the dangers of irregular migration along the Eastern Route," the IOM said.

Initially, Abdusattor Esoev, IOM chief in Yemen, said on Sunday the boat carried 154 Ethiopian migrants, with 68 killed and 74 missing.

In its Tuesday statement, IOM said more than 350 migrants died or went missing in shipwrecks so far this year along the Eastern Route, which migrants from the Horn of Africa use to reach Yemen. The actual figure is likely to be significantly higher, it said.

Yemen has been a major transit point for African migrants fleeing conflicts and poverty. Smugglers often take them on dangerous, overcrowded boats across the Red Sea or the Gulf of Aden.

Tens of thousands of migrants arrive in Yemen every year, despite being one of the poorest Arab countries and mired in a civil war for more than a decade.

More than 60,000 migrants arrived there in 2024, according to the IOM.

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A shipwreck off Yemen has killed 56 migrants and left 132 missing, UN says in revised figures

A shipwreck off Yemen has killed 56 migrants and left 132 missing, UN says in revised figures SAMY MAGDY August 5,...
New Photo - A Korean university student and daughter of a priest was detained by ICE. Faith leaders rallied to secure her release

A Korean university student and daughter of a priest was detained by ICE. Faith leaders rallied to secure her release Karina Tsui, Yoonjung Seo, CNNAugust 5, 2025 at 1:55 AM Yeonsoo Go Courtesy of Go Sorgyoung A South Korean student at Purdue University and the daughter of a beloved Episcopal priest...

- - A Korean university student and daughter of a priest was detained by ICE. Faith leaders rallied to secure her release

Karina Tsui, Yoonjung Seo, CNNAugust 5, 2025 at 1:55 AM

Yeonsoo Go - Courtesy of Go Sorg-young

A South Korean student at Purdue University and the daughter of a beloved Episcopal priest was released from federal immigration detention late Monday, days after her arrest drew outcry and an outpouring of support from faith leaders.

Yeonsoo Go, known as "Soo" to friends and family, spent five days in custody after agents with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested her as she left what lawyers described as a routine visa hearing in Manhattan on Thursday.

"We are so gratified to know that as of this evening, Soo has been returned to 26 Federal Plaza (in Manhattan), and she has been released into her own recognizance," Mary Rothwell Davis, an attorney for the Episcopal Diocese of New York, where Go's mother serves as a priest, told CNN.

The 20-year-old has been reunited with her mother, Davis added.

Go was arrested Thursday after attending an immigration hearing to get her R-2 visa, a religious worker's dependent visa, converted to a student visa, according to Davis. Go moved to the US in 2021 with her mother, the Rev. Kyrie Kim.

Lawyers for the Episcopal Diocese in New York said Go's current visa doesn't expire until December, disputing claims from the Department of Homeland Security that she overstayed her visa.

Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told CNN Go's visa "expired more than two years ago," and she was placed in "expedited removal proceedings" after her arrest Thursday. CNN has reached out to DHS and ICE for details about why she was released.

Ahead of Thursday's hearing, Go told a friend she was nervous about her appointment given the stream of headlines about the Trump administration's aggressive pursuit of immigration enforcement, CNN affiliate WABC reported.

Her fears were realized when she and her mother left her hearing to find ICE agents waiting for her.

Go was immediately arrested and placed in federal detention for 48 hours, Davis said, before being moved – like so many recent ICE detainees – to a facility in Louisiana.

For days, church communities in New York and South Korea took to the streets and social media to condemn her treatment by US immigration authorities.

"We worked very hard for our voices to be heard, to lift her up and to convey that Soo does not deserve to be in detention, and it's been heard," Davis said.

"So grateful that Yeonsoo gets to sleep in her own bed tonight that she was returned to her mother after five days of tirelessly waiting to see what was going on, being transferred to detention centers," Ashley Gonzalez-Grissom, another attorney for the Episcopal Diocese, told WABC.

Calls for release

Supporters from the Episcopal Diocese of New York, the Interfaith Center of New York and the New York Immigration Coalition called for Go's release during a gathering in Manhattan's Federal Plaza Saturday. They didn't know Go was being transported to a detention facility in Louisiana at the same time, Davis told CNN.

The crowd prayed, sang songs and marched with signs bearing the 20-year-old's picture. Go's friends spoke about the positive influence she had on those around her.

"Soo has been there for me," Gabriella Lopez said, referring to Go. Another friend said she and Go used to make meals for the homeless together, according to footage of the Saturday event from WCBS.

Lopez said Go expressed concern before her visa hearing on Thursday.

"She has been a little nervous, given the climate … and now her fears have come true," Lopez told WABC.

The Richwood Correctional Center is seen in this aerial photo in Monroe, Louisiana, on Wednesday, April 9, 2025. - Gerald Herbert/AP

Go's mother was receiving "regular calls" from her daughter after her arrest, the Rev. Matthew Heyd of the Episcopal Diocese of New York told WABC Saturday, but on Monday, Go's father told CNN they only learned their daughter had been moved to Louisiana from online records.

Go was held at the Richwood Correctional Center in Monroe, Louisiana, according to ICE records.

"When I first heard the news about Yeonsoo, my mind went completely blank," Go's father, Sorg-young, told CNN.

His daughter's hard work in high school in Scarsdale, New York, helped her get into Purdue University's College of Pharmacy, he said. He hoped she would have a bright future after successfully completing her freshman year.

"It's heartbreaking that this happened just as she was preparing for her second year. She's a bright, outgoing girl with many friends," Go's father told CNN.

"(Go) was a valued member of our school community, and both her guidance counselor and I have provided letters attesting to her good character and important contributions," Drew Patrick, the Superintendent of Scarsdale Schools, said in a statement to CNN.

Reverend Kim, Go's mother, is the first woman to have been ordained in the Seoul Diocese of the Anglican Church of Korea. Over the weekend, the church joined those calling for Go to be released.

"We urge the prompt release of Ms. Go and call for a fair and transparent review of her immigration status in a manner that upholds human dignity and the values our nations share," the Rev. Dongshin Park, Primate of the Anglican Church of Korea, said in the statement, noting the US "has long been a symbol of liberty, justice, and opportunity, and a trusted partner of Korea."

The 20-year-old's detainment took place amid the Trump administration's attempts to tighten its reins on "sanctuary cities" like New York City. The Justice Department in July sued the city for policies "designed to impede the Federal Government's ability to enforce the federal immigration laws."

The family appealed to the South Korean government to take action over his daughter's case, Go's father said.

"I hope the South Korean government does everything in its capacity, as quickly as possible, so Yeonsoo can be released from her detention as soon as possible," he said.

South Korea's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it is in communication with US officials over Go's detention, telling CNN, "The government has been providing the necessary consular assistance since becoming aware of the case."

Purdue University spokesperson Trevor Peters told CNN the university is aware of reports of "a visa situation involving one of our students" and said school officials have reached out to the student's family.

This story has been with additional information.

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A Korean university student and daughter of a priest was detained by ICE. Faith leaders rallied to secure her release

A Korean university student and daughter of a priest was detained by ICE. Faith leaders rallied to secure her rele...
New Photo - Outrage in Israel as hostage 'horror' videos emerge at decision time for Netanyahu's government

Outrage in Israel as hostage 'horror' videos emerge at decision time for Netanyahu's government Analysis by Matthew Chance, CNN Chief Global Affairs CorrespondentAugust 5, 2025 at 1:32 AM "What I'm doing now is digging my own grave," says Evyatar David, as his fragile figure, weak with hunger, scrap...

- - Outrage in Israel as hostage 'horror' videos emerge at decision time for Netanyahu's government

Analysis by Matthew Chance, CNN Chief Global Affairs CorrespondentAugust 5, 2025 at 1:32 AM

"What I'm doing now is digging my own grave," says Evyatar David, as his fragile figure, weak with hunger, scrapes at the dirt with a shovel in a cramped Gaza tunnel.

"Every day, my body becomes weaker and weaker," the 24-year-old hostage adds, "and time is running out."

This is just one of the horrifying scenes recorded in the latest hostage videos released by Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad at the weekend showing two of the surviving Israeli hostages, kidnapped on October 7, 2023, sharply deteriorating in captivity.

Broadcast of the disturbing images across Israeli and international media was approved by the traumatized hostage families, who told CNN they wanted the plight of their loved ones to be witnessed.

"Evyatar was a young, healthy man before he was abducted, even a bit chubby. Now he looks like a skeleton, a human skeleton, buried alive," the captive's brother, Ilay David, told CNN in Tel Aviv.

The state of Rom Braslavski, still just 22, seems even more dire. In a video released by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad group holding him, his emaciated body is shown writhing in pain on the floor of a makeshift Gaza prison as he tearfully pleads for relief.

"My foot doesn't look good and I can't walk to the bathroom. I've run out of food and water. I can't sleep, I can't live," he sobs.

His own mother says her son's weak voice sounds like he's accepted he may never come out alive.

The videos come amid a worsening hunger crisis in Gaza, with a UN-backed food security agency warning this week that the "worst-case scenario of famine" is unfolding in the territory. Health officials in Gaza say a further 13 people died from malnutrition over the weekend, including one child, bringing the total death toll from starvation since the conflict began in 2023 to at least 175.

Demonstrators take part in a protest to demand the immediate release of hostages held in Gaza since the October 7, 2023, attack on Israel by Hamas and to end the war, as a video released by Hamas of hostage Evyatar David is displayed, in Tel Aviv, Israel, on August 2. - Ammar Awad/Reuters

It all piles further pressure on the Israeli government, already facing growing international isolation over the catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza, and now facing renewed calls for it to get the remaining 50 hostages back home from Gaza as soon as possible.

How best to do that is one of the key questions dividing Israeli opinion.

"The horror videos by Hamas stem from one goal – their attempt to pressure the State of Israel," said Itmar Ben Gvir, the right-wing firebrand, in remarks made during a controversial visit at the weekend to the Al Aqsa Mosque compound in East Jerusalem, known to Jews as Temple Mount.

"It is from here that a message must be sent: to conquer the entire Gaza Strip, declare sovereignty over all of Gaza, eliminate every Hamas member, and encourage voluntary emigration. Only in this way will we bring back the hostages and win the war," Ben Gvir added.

His calls to double down on Israel's already devastating military action in Gaza, and to essentially evict the local Palestinian population, might be dismissed as the ravings of a fringe radical.

But Ben Gvir is a senior minister in the Israeli government and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu depends on him and other Jewish nationalist hardliners, who are against any kind of deal with Hamas, to keep his fragile governing coalition in power.

Furthermore, Israeli media reports suggest Netanyahu may indeed be leaning towards stepping up military operations in Gaza.

In the past, many Israelis, including many hostage families, have accused Netanyahu of deliberately prolonging the Gaza conflict in order to preserve his governing coalition, accusing him of essentially sacrificing their loved ones to cling on to power.

But the latest hostage videos, showing emaciated captives in a, frankly, appalling state have provoked shock and outrage across Israel.

With hostage families convinced time is running out for their loved ones to be rescued or returned, enormous pressure has been placed on the Israeli government to strike a deal with Hamas before it is too late.

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Outrage in Israel as hostage ‘horror’ videos emerge at decision time for Netanyahu’s government

Outrage in Israel as hostage 'horror' videos emerge at decision time for Netanyahu's government Analys...
New Photo - Grand jury declines to indict former Atlanta police officer in church deacon's death

Grand jury declines to indict former Atlanta police officer in church deacon's death August 5, 2025 at 1:25 AM This image from bodycam video provided by the Atlanta Police Department shows Johnny Hollman Sr. speaking with Officer Kiran Kimbrough on Aug. 10, 2023.

- - Grand jury declines to indict former Atlanta police officer in church deacon's death

August 5, 2025 at 1:25 AM

This image from bodycam video provided by the Atlanta Police Department shows Johnny Hollman Sr. speaking with Officer Kiran Kimbrough on Aug. 10, 2023. - Atlanta Police Department/AP

A grand jury on Monday declined to indict a former Atlanta police officer on manslaughter charges in the death of a church deacon who died in a struggle with the officer following a minor car crash.

After hearing the case, Fulton County grand jurors rejected criminal charges against Kiran Kimbrough, said Jeff DiSantis, a spokesperson for Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis.

Johnny Hollman Sr. died in August 2023 after he refused to sign a citation following a wreck. Family members said the 62-year-old Hollman was driving home from Bible study at his daughter's house and taking dinner to his wife when he collided with another vehicle while turning across a busy street just west of downtown.

Body camera video of Hollman's arrest shows Kimbrough repeatedly demanding that Hollman sign the citation, while Hollman insists he did nothing wrong. The two men tussled and Hollman ended up face down on the ground with Kimbrough over him, pressing him down. Holloman repeatedly says "I can't breathe," and Kimbrough uses a Taser to shock him repeatedly. The video also shows a tow truck driver helping Kimbrough.

Hollman became unresponsive and was declared dead at a hospital. An autopsy determined the death was a homicide, with heart disease also a contributing factor.

Lance LoRusso, who represents Kimbrough, said prosecutors sought to indict his client for one count of manslaughter, one count of simple battery and three counts of violating his oath of office. Kimbrough testified before the grand jury, as is an officer's right under state law, LoRusso said.

"While Johnny Hollman's death was tragic, in no way did Kiran Kimbrough cause the death," LoRusso said in a statement Monday. "Johnny Hollman's death was caused by medical complications and his felonious, unlawful resistance of a uniformed officer performing his lawful duties."

DiSantis said Willis is conferring with prosecutors and investigators about whether to ask a new grand jury to indict Kimbrough.

Hollman's family members have repeatedly called for the former officer to be criminally charged.

A statement from lawyers attributed to the family said they were "devastated" by the grand jury's decision not to indict.

"The failure to hold this officer accountable is another painful reminder of how little value is placed on his life by some citizens," the statement said. "Our faith and our fight for justice will not waver."

Atlanta officials fired Kimbrough, saying he should have agreed to Hollman's request to speak to a supervisor. A civil service board upheld the firing, and the Atlanta City Council agreed to settle a lawsuit by Hollman's family alleging excessive force for $3.8 million. The family also sued the tow truck driver and his employer, saying the driver straddled Hollman's head and neck for at least 20 seconds and appeared to "sit with his full body weight" on Hollman's head and neck while Kimbrough handcuffed Hollman.

Atlanta and some other police departments have enacted policies saying that officers should no longer arrest people who refused to sign citations. State lawmakers passed a bill that would have enacted such a policy statewide earlier this year, but Gov. Brian Kemp vetoed it because he opposed a provision unrelated to collecting signatures from people named on citations.

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Grand jury declines to indict former Atlanta police officer in church deacon’s death

Grand jury declines to indict former Atlanta police officer in church deacon's death August 5, 2025 at 1:25 AM...
New Photo - Anti-drone system propels Greek plans for home-grown defence industry

Antidrone system propels Greek plans for homegrown defence industry Lefteris PapadimasAugust 5, 2025 at 2:07 AM By Lefteris Papadimas ATHENS (Reuters) It took just minutes for a new Greekmade antidrone system to show what it is capable of.

- - Anti-drone system propels Greek plans for home-grown defence industry

Lefteris PapadimasAugust 5, 2025 at 2:07 AM

By Lefteris Papadimas

ATHENS (Reuters) -It took just minutes for a new Greek-made anti-drone system to show what it is capable of.

On its first test run with a European Union patrol in the Red Sea a year ago, the Centauros system detected and swiftly brought down two aerial drones launched by Yemen's Houthis, who have been attacking merchant vessels in the busy shipping lane.

Another two drones swiftly retreated: Centauros had jammed their electronics, said Kyriakos Enotiadis, electronics director at state-run Hellenic Aerospace Industry (HAI), which produces the anti-drone system.

The successful test run added impetus to Greek government plans to develop a home-grown industry to mass produce anti-drone and drone systems - part of a 30-billion-euro programme aimed at modernising the country's armed forces by 2036.

Named after the mythological half-man, half-horse creature, Centauros can detect drones from a distance of 150 km (93 miles) and fire from 25 km (15.5 miles). Greece plans to install it throughout its naval fleet.

"It's the only battle-proven anti-drone system (made) in Europe," Enotiadis said, as dozens of employees worked nearby, assembling electronic components of anti-aircraft missiles.

Up until now, Greece has been using only a few dozen ISR - intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance - unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), most of them made abroad, including in France and Israel.

As the multibillion-euro defence programme is rolled out, it will incorporate Greek-made anti-drone and combat drone systems into the armed forces, including its planned anti-aircraft ballistic dome, called Achilles Shield

Greece's neighbour, NATO-ally and historic rival Turkey is a prolific drone exporter.

Greece spends nearly 3.5% of gross domestic product on defence due to the long-standing dispute with Turkey, with the domestic defence industry accounting for only a fraction of that.

In the coming decade, it plans to invest some 800 million euros ($925 million) in defence innovation, said Pantelis Tzortzakis, CEO of the newly founded Hellenic Centre for Defence Innovation (HCDI), which is supervised by the Defence Ministry.

"Our target is to export as much as we spend on defence annually," Tzortzakis said.

Altus, one of a few Greek private companies that manufacture combat drones, in cooperation with France's MBDA, has produced Kerveros - a vertical take-off and landing UAV with a payload of more than 30 kg (66 pounds) that includes advanced anti-tank missiles.

"I'm very optimistic about the Greek drone industry," said Zacharias Sarris, co-owner of Altus, which already exports ISR drones to five countries.

"Greece has a great need for this technology," he added, referring to the country's complex geopolitical position.

In the meantime, HAI is aiming high.

In 2026, it will start mass-producing two more portable anti-drone systems called Iperion and Telemachus, designed to protect troops from drone swarms and lethal mini drones.

It will also present its first big unmanned aerial vehicle, Archytas, named after the ancient Greek inventor said to have produced the first autonomous flying machine in about 400 BC.

"We are striving for this UAV to be the best of its kind," said Nikos Koklas, the company's director of new products.

($1 = 0.8643 euros)

(Reporting by Lefteris Papadimas;Editing by Helen Popper)

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Anti-drone system propels Greek plans for home-grown defence industry

Antidrone system propels Greek plans for homegrown defence industry Lefteris PapadimasAugust 5, 2025 at 2:07 AM By...
New Photo - TSMC cracks down on trade secret breach, initiates legal action

TSMC cracks down on trade secret breach, initiates legal action August 5, 2025 at 8:02 AM (Reuters) Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.

- - TSMC cracks down on trade secret breach, initiates legal action

August 5, 2025 at 8:02 AM

(Reuters) -Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. has launched legal proceedings and taken disciplinary action against employees involved in potential trade secret leaks, it said in an emailed statement on Tuesday.

(Reporting by Bipasha Dey in Bengaluru and Wen-Yee Lee in Taipei; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair)

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TSMC cracks down on trade secret breach, initiates legal action

TSMC cracks down on trade secret breach, initiates legal action August 5, 2025 at 8:02 AM (Reuters) Taiwan Semicon...

 

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