Former Bombardier plant in NI to be used to build military drones

Spirit AeroSystems Holdings awarded a £30m design contract by UK government

Spirit acquired the former Bombardier plant in Belfast late last year
Spirit acquired the former Bombardier plant in Belfast late last year

A former Bombardier plant in Northern Ireland is to be used in the development of drone fighters after new owner Spirit AeroSystems Holdings was awarded a £30 million (€33.8 million) design contract.

The three-year deal to build a prototype model will help support 100 jobs at the Belfast aero-structures factory taken over by Wichita, Kansas-based Spirit in October, the British ministry of defence said Monday.

Britain is seeking to develop so-called "loyal wingman" drones by the end of the decade to serve alongside its Eurofighter Typhoon and Lockheed Martin F-35 warplanes. The Royal Air Force's first unmanned craft would be armed with missiles and carry surveillance and electronic warfare technology.

Project Mosquito, as the drone plan is known, also includes the YJ arm of Northrop Grumman. The wingmen craft would later fly with the Tempest fighter being developed by a consortium led by BAE Systems and slated for service entry in 2035.

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Montreal-based Bombardier sold the Belfast plant as part of a breakup that has limited its aviation activities to business jets. The factory's main operations are focused on wing manufacture for the A220 single-aisle jetliner, originally the Bombardier CSeries but now owned by Airbus SE.

– Bloomberg