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    Economy 3 Mins Read

    Canada’s Growing Aerospace And Defense Sector

    Economy 3 Mins Read
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    Canada’s latest defence procurement is becoming impossible to ignore. The CBC reports that Ottawa is now looking beyond simply purchasing Saab’s GlobalEye airborne early warning aircraft. NATO itself has now selected the same Swedish system to replace its aging Boeing E-3 AWACS fleet, making GlobalEye the alliance’s future airborne surveillance platform. This is no small contract. NATO intends to acquire up to 10 aircraft in a program worth roughly $4.5 billion, while Canada is expected to purchase six of its own. The significance extends well beyond military hardware. It represents another major boost for Canada’s aerospace industry and another step toward integrating Canada’s economy deeper into the expanding military-industrial complex.

    What many fail to appreciate is that this is not simply Sweden selling aircraft to Canada. GlobalEye is built around Bombardier’s Global 6500 business jet, manufactured in Canada. Every NATO aircraft ordered means additional work flowing into Canadian aerospace, engineering, maintenance, supply chains, and long-term servicing. NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte himself emphasized that this is a multinational program involving European, Canadian, and American industries. Canada is no longer merely buying equipment. It is positioning itself as part of the production network supplying NATO’s future surveillance capability.

    This follows precisely the trend we have been watching unfold. Canada recently selected Saab over Boeing for its own airborne early warning fleet, citing Arctic sovereignty, domestic industrial development, and reduced dependence on American suppliers. Saab has openly stated that the program will provide skilled work for Canadian industry, while Bombardier becomes an integral supplier to NATO’s next-generation surveillance fleet. These are not isolated procurements. They are laying the industrial foundation for decades of defence spending.

    Canada already has the industrial base to profit from this shift. Ottawa’s own 2026 aerospace review found that the Canadian aerospace industry contributed C$34.2 billion to GDP in 2024 and supported 225,000 jobs, while remaining the top R&D performer in Canadian manufacturing. The broader defense industry added another $11.1 billion to GDP and supported 81,800 jobs. Canada also exported nearly C$27 billion in aerospace goods to 166 countries in 2024, with over 70% of aerospace manufacturing revenue tied to exports. This is why the GlobalEye decision matters. It is not just a plane. It plugs Bombardier and Canada’s aerospace supply chain directly into NATO’s rearmament cycle.

    Canada is steadily transforming from a country known primarily for natural resources into one playing a much larger role within NATO’s defense production network. Whether one supports that direction or not, investors should recognize what governments themselves are signaling through their spending priorities. The expansion of aerospace, surveillance technology, advanced manufacturing, and military infrastructure is no accident. It reflects a world that is preparing for a far more dangerous geopolitical future than politicians are willing to admit publicly.



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