Brazil to double air fleet as part of $10.6 billion investment
Aug 23, 09:27 PM
A newly received F-39E Gripen fighter stands by on a runway in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on April 22, 2022. (Andre Borges/AFP via Getty Images)
SAO PAULO — Brazil plans to invest 52.8 billion
reals (U.S. $10.6 billion) for research, development and equipment acquisition
efforts for its military, including nearly doubling the size of its Gripen
fighter fleet and financing projects by local aircraft
manufacturer Embraer for aerial refueling planes, the government announced
earlier this month.
The measure, revealed Aug. 11, is part of the
government’s Growth Acceleration Program, or PAC, established by President Luiz
Inácio Lula da Silva. PAC guided programs during his first two terms in office,
which lasted from 2002 to 2010, and there are now plans for the overarching
initiative to spend 1.7 trillion reals, with defense a key area of focus.
“Equipping the Armed Forces with cutting-edge
technologies, enhancing national defense capability, and border monitoring are
some of the guidelines of the New PAC,” according to a government
website.
The government intends to invest 27.8 billion
reals by 2026, and an additional 25 billion reals after that period, without a
specific deadline.
The PAC does not require the legislature’s
approval, as it is a federal investment program funded by government resources,
state contributions and the private sector through concessions.
However, there are some obstacles, such as
bureaucratic processes and legal uncertainties for public works. Regarding
defense, which will rely almost exclusively on public funds, the government
might face financial challenges, according to Cristiano Noronha, the vice
president of Arko Advice, a consultancy firm in Brazil’s capital Brasília
focused on intelligence and political analysis.
“The executive [branch] has often made budget cuts
over the years. The investments will depend on the government’s fiscal
capacity, spending control and economic growth,” he told Defense News, adding
that the program could be seen as an “expression of intent.”
For the Brazilian Air Force, the plan involves the
production and acquisition of 34 F-39 Gripen fighters, which would almost
double the country’s fleet. Brazil signed a $5.04 billion
contract with Swedish manufacturer Saab in 2014 for the purchase of 36
Gripen fighters, for delivery by 2027. In 2022, the signatories added four more
fighters to the contract.
Of the 40 now on order, Brazil has received six,
with four in operation. The contract stipulated that assembly for 15 F-39E
Gripens would take place at Embraer’s factory in Gavião Peixoto in the state of
São Paulo. The deal also included a technology sharing agreement between
Brazilian engineers and Saab. The fighter production line was inaugurated in May 2023.
“The renewal of the fighter aviation [fleet] is
one of the main projects of the Brazilian Air Force covered in the new PAC, and
is being realized through the acquisition of the Gripen fighter,” Defense
Minister José Mucio Monteiro Filho told Defense News. “It is the most modern
combat aircraft in Latin America, enabling Brazil to significantly enhance its
air defense capability in line with the country’s continental dimensions.”
The minister also pointed to another program under
PAC: the purchase of nine C-390 Millennium planes — initially known as KC-390 —
produced by Embraer, along with the development of a refueling version of the
model.
“Besides its military role, the KC-390 can be used
in national and international humanitarian aid actions, such as supporting
public emergencies and firefighting,” he said.
The government website also mentioned plans to
convert two Airbus A330 aircraft into
aeromedical and aerial refueling planes.
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