The Prague Post - As NATO ups defence spending, can Europe produce the weapons?

EUR -
AED 4.243572
AFN 81.469444
ALL 99.149043
AMD 442.834049
ANG 2.067962
AOA 1059.621008
ARS 1365.24062
AUD 1.779654
AWG 2.082842
AZN 1.968988
BAM 1.965965
BBD 2.334993
BDT 141.323141
BGN 1.957537
BHD 0.43583
BIF 3399.567891
BMD 1.15553
BND 1.485318
BOB 7.991527
BRL 6.406607
BSD 1.15651
BTN 99.515394
BWP 15.544776
BYN 3.784601
BYR 22648.378878
BZD 2.323011
CAD 1.569961
CDF 3324.458889
CHF 0.938
CLF 0.028228
CLP 1083.228509
CNY 8.298556
CNH 8.307576
COP 4771.689881
CRC 582.91389
CUC 1.15553
CUP 30.621533
CVE 110.786441
CZK 24.84493
DJF 205.361163
DKK 7.461301
DOP 68.527389
DZD 150.352551
EGP 57.438983
ERN 17.332943
ETB 155.307646
FJD 2.597342
FKP 0.850459
GBP 0.851846
GEL 3.16042
GGP 0.850459
GHS 11.90641
GIP 0.850459
GMD 81.469282
GNF 10001.108533
GTQ 8.887026
GYD 241.95098
HKD 9.070618
HNL 30.171325
HRK 7.538333
HTG 151.665482
HUF 402.707866
IDR 18820.10953
ILS 4.160155
IMP 0.850459
INR 99.252881
IQD 1513.74369
IRR 48647.793814
ISK 144.037202
JEP 0.850459
JMD 185.157335
JOD 0.819316
JPY 166.518785
KES 149.645467
KGS 101.051502
KHR 4651.006782
KMF 492.837731
KPW 1040.06584
KRW 1579.043107
KWD 0.353835
KYD 0.963708
KZT 593.172062
LAK 25034.547771
LBP 103535.446704
LKR 346.273364
LRD 230.648054
LSL 20.73064
LTL 3.411979
LVL 0.698969
LYD 6.291903
MAD 10.537856
MDL 19.804913
MGA 5147.884477
MKD 61.591335
MMK 2426.053799
MNT 4137.037757
MOP 9.349541
MRU 45.782518
MUR 52.588586
MVR 17.800977
MWK 2005.999671
MXN 21.910925
MYR 4.905805
MZN 73.89655
NAD 20.730635
NGN 1782.335411
NIO 41.950023
NOK 11.468204
NPR 159.224631
NZD 1.920123
OMR 0.444292
PAB 1.15651
PEN 4.170888
PGK 4.781626
PHP 64.802529
PKR 326.957514
PLN 4.273091
PYG 9227.791107
QAR 4.206825
RON 5.027136
RSD 117.283981
RUB 92.187067
RWF 1646.629587
SAR 4.337371
SBD 9.645657
SCR 16.419661
SDG 693.899733
SEK 10.950611
SGD 1.481162
SHP 0.908065
SLE 25.479855
SLL 24230.880068
SOS 660.389361
SRD 43.364756
STD 23917.128362
SVC 10.119321
SYP 15024.294106
SZL 20.730627
THB 38.107635
TJS 11.680191
TMT 4.044353
TND 3.39127
TOP 2.70637
TRY 45.518855
TTD 7.842549
TWD 34.121983
TZS 2998.59953
UAH 47.969823
UGX 4167.584088
USD 1.15553
UYU 47.546244
UZS 17598.715198
VES 118.057029
VND 30130.432615
VUV 138.621479
WST 3.176351
XAF 659.383386
XAG 0.031814
XAU 0.000336
XCD 3.122877
XDR 0.8155
XOF 655.767165
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.198532
ZAR 20.738332
ZMK 10401.156591
ZMW 27.958281
ZWL 372.080039
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

As NATO ups defence spending, can Europe produce the weapons?
As NATO ups defence spending, can Europe produce the weapons? / Photo: Jonathan NACKSTRAND - AFP

As NATO ups defence spending, can Europe produce the weapons?

NATO leaders meeting in The Hague this month look set to agree to a major increase in military budgets under pressure from US President Donald Trump.

Text size:

But as Europe promises to ramp up defence spending and wean itself from reliance on the United States, a key question looms: can it produce enough weapons?

"This is really keeping me up at night, making sure that we not only ramp up spending, but also ramp up defence industrial production," NATO chief Mark Rutte said Thursday.

More than three years into Moscow's war on Ukraine, NATO says Russia's weapons production far outstrips the West's and has warned that the Kremlin could be ready to attack the alliance within five years.

The demands on NATO's European members are huge: new hardware targets agreed this month will require the biggest armament spree in decades.

Rutte has pushed for a commitment to bolster defence spending to 3.5 percent of GDP within seven years, plus 1.5 percent on security-related areas such as infrastructure.

That would likely work out as hundreds of billions of extra euros a year.

While countries seem largely on board, German defence minister Boris Pistorius last week pointed to one challenge "nobody really discusses".

"It is about how much money is really able to be spent... if industry is not able to deliver what we ordered," he told his NATO colleagues.

The push to bolster output will be prominent in The Hague with NATO hosting an industry forum alongside the summit.

- 'Need the orders' -

After years of underinvestment following the Cold War, the European Union has unveiled a raft of initiatives since Moscow's 2022 invasion.

National budgets have increased and Brussels has sought to plug the funding gap with plans that could mobilise a further 800 billion euros ($924 billion).

A major focus is making sure most of that money is spent buying weapons in Europe so the continent can stand more on its own two feet.

But persistent gripes remain: businesses lack long-term orders, capacity is too low, costs are too high, production times too long and the industry too fragmented.

"To some extent, the budgetary debates and the spending debates are behind us. The question is, how do you translate all of that funding into actual capabilities?" Hugues Lavandier, head of aerospace and defence for Europe at McKinsey, told a Brussels conference.

Waiting times for new weaponry can stretch for years, and for some key equipment such as longer-range missiles, Europe still relies on the United States.

But proponents say the continent has the potential to meet demand -- provided governments and defence firms get a move on.

"Our assessment is that we can produce 95 plus percent of whatever we need to credibly deter and be ready," said Francois Arbault, a top official overseeing the defence industry at the European Commission.

"But we need the orders and we need that manufacturing power to be actually materialised in additional investment, because you need to ramp up."

- 'Bang for our buck' -

Industry leaders say orders are picking up, if not as fast or for as long a period as hoped, and insist businesses are already putting money into expanding.

The CEO of Swedish defence giant Saab, Micael Johansson, told AFP his firm increased its workforce by 6,000 people and quadrupled ammunition in recent years.

"Absolutely, we can do more -- and fortunately, many of us have invested at risk to increase capacity," he said.

"We're getting the signals that demand will be high, but I can't say that I know exactly what target levels we're aiming for."

One fear officials have is that a sudden splurge in spending could lead to price hikes.

"There's a real risk that we get, you know, less bang for our buck because of inflation," said Matthew Whitaker, the US ambassador to NATO.

"We need to make sure that it's incremental, that it's measured, but that it's sustained."

To help smooth out barriers blocking investment, the EU is set next week to unveil a push to strip away red tape.

"It cannot be that the defence industry needs to wait five years to have a permit to build a new factory," EU defence commissioner Andrius Kubilius said.

"(Russian leader Vladimir) Putin will not wait for us to get our paperwork in order."

One way to bolster Europe's capacity long-term could be turning to battle-hardened Ukraine.

As Russia's war has raged on, Ukrainian firms have become experts at cost-cutting and the country is now a leader in drone technology.

"The Ukrainian industry is very important," said Guntram Wolff at the Bruegel think tank in Brussels.

"The products that they produce are actually low cost and very effective."

O.Holub--TPP