Hanwha Aerospace Signs UAE Teaming Deal for K9 Howitzer Local Production
South Korea's Hanwha Aerospace (012450.KS) inked a teaming agreement with the UAE's Generation 5 Holding at the Eurosatory 2026 defence exhibition in Paris on June 22, targeting in-country production of the K9 155mm self-propelled howitzer in the United Arab Emirates.
The memorandum of understanding covers local manufacturing, maintenance, repair, and technology partnership for the K9 Thunder platform—a 155mm/52-calibre system capable of engaging targets beyond 40 kilometres that is already deployed in 10 countries across four continents: South Korea, India, Australia, Turkey, Poland, Finland, Norway, Estonia, Romania, and Egypt.
Why It Matters for Korean Markets
Hanwha Aerospace shares have outperformed the broader KOSPI in 2026, buoyed by a surge in global demand for 155mm artillery systems following lessons from the Ukraine conflict. A manufacturing foothold in the UAE—one of the Middle East's fastest-growing defence markets—adds a new recurring-revenue stream through maintenance and lifecycle support while creating a regional production hub that could serve downstream customers across the MENA region.
Partnership Details
Generation 5 Holding, an Emirati defence and technology group and parent company of Calidus—which develops aircraft and armoured vehicles indigenously—brings UAE industrial credentials and established ties to the country's defence ambitions.
"The Middle East is a priority market for Hanwha Aerospace," said Il Sung, head of MENA operations at Hanwha Aerospace.
Generation 5 Managing Director Khalifa Murad Alblooshi said the company was "well positioned to develop, manufacture, and deliver high-performance howitzer systems."
No contract value was disclosed. The teaming agreement is a precursor to formal bid submissions and remains contingent on UAE defence procurement decisions.
Strategic Context: Post-Ukraine Artillery Demand
The K9 Thunder's battlefield credentials—validated across polar, desert, and continental terrains—have pushed it to the top of allied procurement shortlists. Egypt's 2022 contract, valued at USD 1.7 billion, set a regional benchmark and proved Hanwha's ability to close major MENA deals. The UAE partnership extends that playbook toward local-content requirements that Gulf states increasingly mandate for large defence purchases.
Hanwha Aerospace established its MENA regional headquarters in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in 2025, signalling a sustained commitment to on-the-ground business development rather than export-only transactions. The UAE addition complements that structure by providing a manufacturing anchor further along the Gulf coastline.
Hanwha Aerospace's broader portfolio—spanning land systems, naval vessels through Hanwha Ocean, and defence electronics through Hanwha Systems—positions the group to offer bundled solutions as Gulf states pursue integrated-force modernisation rather than single-platform purchases.
Sources: Korea Herald, Breaking Defense, Janes Defence, ASDNews (June 22–24, 2026)



