Hanwha expected to sign $751 mn howitzer deal with Romania
Hyung-Kyu Kim
Feb 26, 2024 (Gmt+09:00)
Hanwha Aerospace's K9 howitzers during a military drill in South Korea (Courtesy of News1 Korea) Hanwha Aerospace Co., South Korea’s major aerospace and defense system developer, is set to sign a 1 trillion won ($751 million) contract to supply its K9 howitzers to Romania next month in what would be its first export deal to the country and the sixth in Europe.
The company said during its earnings conference call on Friday that it will announce a weapons export deal with Romania in the first quarter. It is reported to be a contract to supply the Eastern European country with 54 units of its K9 howitzers in a deal worth about 1 trillion won.
Other defense companies from Germany and Turkiye, or Turkey, are known to have joined the bid.
If Hanwha Aerospace finally clinches the deal, it would mark not only its first weapon exports to Romania but also the sixth of its kind to a country in Europe.
It has bagged orders to export its weapons to Turkiye, Norway, Finland, Estonia and Poland in the region so far.
Encouraged by a slew of export deals, Hanwha Aerospace has set a target to earn over 5 trillion won in defense sales this year, up more than 20% from last year’s sales of 4.1 trillion won.
The operating profit of its defense division reached 572.7 billion won in 2023.
Hope is high that the company will achieve the target as the Korean parliament is set to pass a revised law that will lift the cap on the equity capital of the Export-Import Bank of Korea, or the Korea Eximbank, to 25 trillion won from the current 15 trillion won.
The revision is designed to allow the Korea Eximbank to increase financial support for local export companies. The law currently limits the policy bank’s credit extension to a business or an individual to 40% of its equity capital.
“Immediately after the (Korean) National Assembly passes the legal revision concerning the Korea Eximbank, we will complete our deal with Poland to export K9 howitzers and K239 Chunmoo rocket artillery systems,” said an official from Hanwha Aerospace.
The parliament is due to vote on the revised bill on Feb. 29.