Mitsubishi Heavy integrates Hivemind AI into drone

Key Points
  • Mitsubishi Heavy Industries completed flight demonstrations of AI-powered mission autonomy for UAVs using Shield AI’s Hivemind Enterprise, with development and testing completed in eight weeks.
  • The project highlights efforts to accelerate autonomous UAV capabilities in Japan through domestic development and collaboration with U.S. defense technology firms.

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries confirmed it has successfully conducted flight demonstrations of AI-powered mission autonomy for unmanned aerial vehicles, using the Hivemind Enterprise development environment from U.S.-based Shield AI.

According to Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, the full development cycle—from AI design and training to installation and flight—was completed in eight weeks.

The company stated that the use of Shield AI’s Hivemind Enterprise environment allowed engineers to focus more directly on mission autonomy rather than building and maintaining multiple development tools.

- ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW -

Flight demonstrations were conducted on November 7, 2025, in Inashiki District, Ibaraki Prefecture, and on December 18, 2025, in Ota City, Gunma Prefecture. The AI system was integrated into the company’s ARMD (Affordable Rapid-prototyping Mitsubishi-Drone initiative) unmanned aerial vehicle following simulation evaluation and Hardware-in-the-Loop testing.

According to the company, the UAV completed successful flight demonstrations after the AI system was trained and validated through simulation and testing phases.

In a statement, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries said it “successfully conducted flight demonstrations of AI-powered mission autonomy developed for use in unmanned aerial vehicles by leveraging an AI development environment through Hivemind Enterprise.”

The company added that mission autonomy development began in September 2025 and emphasized that domestic production of such capabilities is essential for Japan’s future UAV operations.

The ARMD UAV used in the demonstration has an overall length of 2.5 meters, a wingspan of 2.5 meters, and a takeoff weight of 20 kilograms, powered by an engine-based propulsion system.

Mission autonomy refers to the ability of a UAV to perform tasks such as navigation, targeting, and decision-making with minimal or no human intervention. This capability relies on artificial intelligence models trained through simulation and real-world testing to interpret sensor data and execute mission objectives.

The use of a development platform such as Hivemind Enterprise enables faster iteration of AI models, allowing developers to test and refine autonomous behaviors in simulated environments before deploying them on physical systems.

This approach reduces development complexity by consolidating coding, training, simulation, and testing processes into a single environment, rather than relying on multiple separate tools.

The collaboration between Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and Shield AI reflects growing international cooperation in the field of defense-related artificial intelligence, particularly in unmanned systems.

Shield AI has developed autonomy software designed to enable UAVs to operate in complex and contested environments where communication links may be limited or disrupted.

Readers who wish to follow our weekly coverage can subscribe to the Weekly Defense Roundup.

If you wish to report a grammatical or factual error in this article, please let us know by using the online form.

Executive Editor

Support The Defence Blog

Independent reporting takes resources. Join us on Patreon.

Become a patron

More Like This

Australia tests tiny new tool against drone threats

A small British company best known for catching drones in mid-air nets just landed a much bigger job: helping Australia's military spot the things...

Renault will help build France’s new kamikaze drone

Thales and Renault Group are joining forces to mass-produce a French kamikaze drone, betting that the country's largest carmaker can do for loitering munitions...

Israel buys more Smart Shooter’s AI-guided weapon station

A remote-controlled weapon station with AI-assisted targeting that uses image processing to help the operator detect and track ground and aerial targets, and that...

Sweden and France make AI that learns itself in combat

Teaching a military AI system to recognize enemy drones requires showing it thousands of examples of those drones under real battlefield conditions, across different...

Israel’s Aeronautics solves the operator shortage problem

The hardest constraint in drone warfare has never been the hardware but the human being sitting behind the ground control station, because many military...