Britain and Japan to pay for most of fighter project agreed with
Italy-sources
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[March 15, 2023]
By Nobuhiro Kubo and Tim Kelly
TOKYO (Reuters) - Britain and Japan are set to dominate a three-nation
project with Italy to build an advanced jet fighter, with Rome set to
pay around only a fifth of the overall development cost, two sources
said.
Known as the Global Combat Air Programme (GCAP), the project is expected
to cost tens of billions of dollars before the new jet fighter enters
service around the middle of the next decade.
"The cost of the project will likely be around 40% each for Japan and
Britain," one of the people with knowledge of discussions told Reuters.
Both sources, who asked to remain anonymous because they are not
authorized to talk to the media, added that most of the programmes
details were yet to be decided.
That rough investment breakdown is among the first details to emerge
from talks on a high-profile venture that will be a test of whether
Japan and Europe can collaborate on major military projects.
Japan's defence ministry said that discussions were ongoing and declined
to comment on the cost sharing ratios.
The defence ministers from the three countries, Japan's Yasukazu Hamada,
Britain's Ben Wallace and Italy's Guido Crosetto will gather in Tokyo on
Thursday, for their first face to face meeting since the fighter deal
was agreed in December.
Although the upcoming meeting is not expected to produce any major fresh
agreement, it may serve to boost political backing for collaboration.
"GCAP is not going to be a love affair, it's going to be a marriage,"
Wallace said during a speech on Wednesday at the DSEI Japan defence show
near Tokyo, which featured a display of the proposed fighter.
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A concept model of the Global Combat Air
Programme (GCAP)'s fighter jet is displayed at the DSEI Japan
defense show at Makuhari Messe in Chiba, east of Tokyo, Japan March
15, 2023. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
Details of which companies will build what components are being
hammered out in regular talks between more junior government
officials and contractors in Britain, Japan and Italy, the sources
said.
Those include Japan's Mitsubishi Heavy Industries , which is
expected to lead the design with Britain's BAE Systems PLC. Italy's
Leonardo Spa is working with Japan's Mitsubishi Electric on the
aircraft's sensors, with Rolls Royce PLC working with Japanese jet
engine maker IHI Corp.
Since its defeat in World War Two Japan has only ever worked with
the United States on big defence projects, but in recent years it
has begun to forge security ties with other U.S. allies, including
Britain and Australia, as neighboring China's military power has
expanded.
Development of the new advanced fighter is slated to begin in 2025
through a joint development organization, the sources said.
(Reporting by Nobuhiro Kubo and Tim Kelly; Editing by Simon
Cameron-Moore)
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