this post was submitted on 30 Oct 2025
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Any scan of global markets with a reliable defence product and supply chain in mind should take Canada to the Nordics. The Nordic countries are all solid NATO partners and share our northern operating environment. Canadian cabinet ministers have recently travelled to Sweden and Finland to explore new defence deals, including a visit by the Industry Minister Mélanie Joly to the Saab firm. Foreign Minister Anita Anand, meanwhile, travelled to Finland to talk about Arctic security.

The Nordics are trying to ramp up production of drone systems and innovate, while also holding out cautionary lessons about a seemingly red-hot market. A leading Norwegian drone company, Nordic Unmanned, founded in 2014, has just declared bankruptcy, citing cash flow issues. Its leading-edge drones were deployed as far afield as Brazil, and were a key element of maritime surveillance for the European Union’s European Maritime Safety Agency. One of their operational tasks was to keep an eye on the Russian shadow tanker fleet used to circumvent Western sanctions. As startling as this outcome appears, other drone companies in Northern Europe are ramping up.

We [Canada] must develop our own drone manufacturing sector, just as we look for new partnership opportunities. We can follow the Nordic and U.K. leads here.

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The Nordics and the U.K. offer both markets and lessons for Canadian defence procurement. Their firms produce advanced drone and counter-drones systems that could be incorporated into the Canadian arsenal. They also remind us that the build-up of a military drone capacity requires market capitalization, the ability to scale for start-up companies, and significant government investment and backing to avoid the fate of a company like Nordic Unmanned. All of these lessons should be incorporated into Canada’s forthcoming defence industrial strategy.

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[–] bowreality@lemmy.ca 2 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I think it makes sense to manufacture drones here. CAE seems to be the go to for training why not have our own drones too? Partnering with Europe and especially Scandinavia makes sense too.

[–] non_burglar@lemmy.world 1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I work in search and rescue in Canada and i can tell you that the willingness to advance drone tech and training is there.

Ironically, it is the American market that slows us down.

Example: drones (not hobby drones, but serious flir drones) are equipped with aprs antennae and can detect helicopters and stay 100 m away from them. However, there is no inverse system where heli and fixed wing craft can know of drones and their positions and proximity. In a busy search area or wildfire control situation, this is very important.

There are several proposals to make drones licensable with call signs and aprs broadcast, but the American FAA won't get on board with it. Since we share most flight infrastructure with the us, we are hamstrung by this and have to work around it.

[–] bowreality@lemmy.ca 1 points 4 months ago

Crazy! I hope we get decouple enough from the USA to build what we need especially for search and rescue! There is a huge market in so many industries.