Cost Exchange Advantage

The economics of interception have changed.

Modern air defense systems were built for a world where threats were expensive and rare. Loitering munitions, FPV drones, and saturation attacks have inverted that calculus. KINS is built for the world that exists now.

01 — The Numbers

$2,500–$3,000 vs. $3,500,000.

$2,500
–$3,000
KINS consumable replacement target
per engagement
$3,500,000
Patriot PAC-3 MSE
published procurement cost per missile
11
SeaRAM magazine depth
missiles per launcher

At $3,500,000 per Patriot intercept against a $20,000–$50,000 Shahed-class drone, the attacker holds a cost ratio of 70:1 to 175:1 in their favor. A saturating swarm of 20 assets exhausts SeaRAM before the engagement ends. The math is not sustainable at scale.

02 — The Challenge

Air defense systems were not built for this threat.

Patriot, THAAD, and SeaRAM were engineered for high-value, low-volume threats — ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and sophisticated aerial platforms that justify a multi-million-dollar interceptor. That calculus made sense when threats were rare and expensive.

The modern loitering munition threat is the inverse: mass-produced, low-cost, and designed specifically to be deployed in volumes that exhaust defensive magazine depth before the engagement ends. The attacker wins by volume. The defender loses by economics.

04 — Layered Economics

A cost model aligned with threat value.

The economic case for layered defense exists precisely when the outer layer is cheaper than the inner layer. Deploying a $3,500,000 interceptor against a $20,000 drone is not a layered defense problem — it is a resource allocation failure.

KINS enables a resource allocation model aligned with threat value:

  • Low-cost physical intercept for low-cost, high-volume threats
  • High-value precision interceptors reserved for high-value threats
  • Reusable carrier platforms — cost incurred on the panel, not the platform
  • Defensive economics that scale with threat volume rather than against it
05 — Resource Allocation

Sustained defensive capacity across the engagement.

A defense posture that deploys a $3,500,000 interceptor against a $20,000 drone is not sustainable against an adversary with mass-production capability and a willingness to accept platform loss. Ukraine, the Red Sea, and the Middle East have demonstrated this at operational scale.

The integrated air defense architecture needs a layer that can absorb volume attacks economically — without drawing down the missile inventories that take months to replenish and cost hundreds of millions of dollars to maintain.

What KINS Changes

  • Intercept cost bounded to net panel replacement, not full system
  • Carrier platforms accumulate reuse cycles rather than being expended
  • Defensive capacity regenerates rapidly after each engagement
  • No explosive warhead — no unexploded ordnance risk over defended assets
  • No propellant plume — no secondary hazard to crew or infrastructure
  • Scalable to engagement volume without proportional cost increase
Contact

Discuss the cost exchange model.

Detailed cost modeling, system economics, and deployment architecture are available under NDA to qualified defense contractors, integrators, and government acquisition stakeholders.