Airbus Group expects to see growing demand for military aircraft in Asia amid simmering tensions in the South China Sea and other areas.
The Asian market for defence and space-related business could grow to about $50 billion a year within the next five years, from $45 billion now, said Christian Scherer, executive vice president for marketing and sales at Airbus Defense & Space, the planemaker's defence unit.
Countries across Asia are stepping up military spending as China asserts claims to disputed territories and resources. Japan has also boosted its defence budget for three years straight as the government seeks to ease pacifist constraints imposed by the country's post-World War II constitution.
Read also:
• Editorial: NZ must keep heavy airlift capability
• Airbus builds ties with Asia
Asia's market for defence-related aircraft "is not only the second-largest in absolute numbers, but also the fastest-growing" in the world, Scherer said in an interview on Wednesday in Langkawi, Malaysia. Needs range "anywhere from surveillance aircraft, small surveillance aircraft, maritime patrol aircraft, electronic warfare-type airplanes - all the way up to big logistic aircraft, fighters, tankers."