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[Herald Economy — Eunji Choi] Pablo Aviation, a swarm-AI aerospace and defense platform company, is accelerating its push into the global defense market by supplying a swarm solution to a North American Arctic training and testing center.
Pablo Aviation said on April 22 that it signed a contract on the 20th (local time) with the Arctic Testing Center (ATC) in Yukon, northwest Canada, to supply its S10s loitering munitions (kamikaze drones) and swarm-operation software.
The agreement goes beyond equipment sales. It establishes a proof-of-concept collaboration to validate Pablo’s technology in front of NATO and North American defense officials. The ATC is Canada’s largest northern training facility, covering roughly 4,000 square kilometers (about 1,544 sq mi) of extreme-cold, wide-area terrain. As Arctic security rises on the international agenda, NATO members and military and government agencies are focusing on the site.
Under the contract, Pablo Aviation will conduct a series of combat-system tests, including swarm-based reconnaissance and strike missions, counter‑UAS (c‑UAS) scenarios, and sensor detection and interception trials. The goal is to demonstrate operational viability in polar and high-latitude environments and to establish a launch point for exports to NATO and North American defense markets. This effort will make Pablo the first South Korean defense-drone company to validate swarm-operation capability under Arctic conditions.
The company and ATC plan to attend the Arctic Development Expo 2026 in Inuvik, Canada, this June, where they will demonstrate S10s swarm tactical flights to an audience of roughly 200 NATO and North American defense officials.
The proof-of-concept and demonstration are intended to lead to a main production and supply agreement with Canadian defense manufacturer IMT Group for local manufacturing. IMT Group is expected to act as a strategic partner to commercialize Pablo’s swarm-drone solution across North America and NATO markets.
“This ATC contract is a strategic milestone for Pablo Aviation’s swarm technology entering the NATO market,” said Kim Young‑jun, chairman of Pablo Aviation. “We will use our partnership with IMT Group to translate this progress into concrete business results in North America.”











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