UK Awards £27M Leonardo Spares Deal to Boost Typhoon Jets, Apache Helicopters and RAF Airlift Readiness
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The United Kingdom has awarded Leonardo UK a £27 million contract to supply critical consumable spares for Typhoon FGR4 fighters, Apache AH-64E attack helicopters, Chinook helicopters, A400M Atlas transports and C-17 airlifters, in a move announced on June 19, 2026, that directly supports fleet readiness and sortie generation. The agreement can rise to £70 million over seven years and covers around 11,000 NATO Stock Numbers, showing a broad effort to prevent small but essential parts from slowing aircraft availability.
The contract supports aircraft used on live operations, including in the Middle East, where shortages of certified consumables can disrupt maintenance, weapon loading and daily flight schedules. By strengthening access to these components, the UK aims to reduce avoidable downtime across key combat, lift and transport fleets while improving operational resilience.
Related topic: US approves $1.5 billion UH-60M Black Hawk helicopter sale to Austria.
Leonardo UK has received a £27 million contract, potentially rising to £70 million, to supply critical consumable spares for UK Typhoon, Apache, Chinook, A400M Atlas and C-17 aircraft, strengthening fleet availability, sortie generation and operational readiness (Picture source: UK MoD).
The technical significance lies in the category of material being managed. Blind rivets, washers, cable ties, masks and similar consumables are low-cost items compared with missiles, engines or radars, but they sit inside the airworthiness chain that allows maintainers to close access panels, secure wiring looms, replace worn fittings, complete minor structural repairs, and return aircraft to a cleared configuration after inspection. The new arrangement separates fast-moving items, which Leonardo will manage proactively against stores availability, from slow-moving items handled through a more traditional demand-led model. It also shifts more equipment management to depot level, with Leonardo responsible for modelling, forecasting, stock procurement and obsolescence management. In practical terms, this reduces the chance that a Typhoon, Apache or Chinook is unavailable because a minor certified component is missing from the supply chain.
For the Royal Air Force, the most sensitive combat-air effect concerns the Typhoon FGR4, which remains central to UK Quick Reaction Alert, NATO air policing and expeditionary strike tasks. The aircraft’s armament includes Meteor, AMRAAM and ASRAAM air-to-air missiles, Paveway IV, Brimstone 2 and Storm Shadow air-to-surface weapons, and a Mauser 27 mm cannon, supported by ECR 90 radar, PIRATE infrared search-and-track equipment, electronic countermeasures, missile approach warning, expendables and a towed radar decoy. This means the spare-parts contract indirectly supports both the aircraft’s defensive counter-air role and its strike role: missile launchers, pylons, avionics bays, cooling, electrical harnesses and access panels all have to remain serviceable for weapons to be uploaded, tested and released under operational rules.
The armament details matter because Typhoon’s weapons impose different sustainment demands. Meteor is a 190 kg beyond-visual-range air-to-air missile, 3.7 m long and 178 mm in diameter, using a ramjet propulsion concept that preserves energy later in the engagement, improving the probability of reaching manoeuvring aircraft at distance. ASRAAM is lighter, at 88 kg, 2.9 m long and 166 mm in diameter, and is designed for within-visual-range engagements with lock-on-before-launch and lock-on-after-launch modes, which makes aircraft helmet cueing and rapid launch preparation important. Brimstone weighs 50 kg, measures 1.8 m in length and 180 mm in diameter, and uses millimetric-wave radar and semi-active laser guidance with a tandem shaped-charge warhead, giving Typhoon a precision option against moving armour, fast vehicles, bunkers and some maritime targets. Consumable spares do not increase missile range, but they help preserve the maintenance tempo needed to keep armed aircraft cycling through alert, strike and training missions.
The Apache AH-64E portion is equally relevant for British Army combat aviation because the helicopter’s weapons are carried close to the tactical edge and depend on high aircraft availability during land operations. The AH-64E is armed with a 30 mm automatic cannon, wing-mounted 70 mm Hydra rockets and Hellfire missiles; a standard fit includes 16 Hellfire missiles, 70 Hydra-70 rockets and 1,200 rounds of 30 mm ammunition. Its Longbow radar can detect and classify up to 256 potential targets, display 128 to the crew and prioritise the top 16 threats in seconds, while optical and thermal sights support target identification at night and in low visibility. Those figures show why the helicopter is not only an armed escort asset but also a sensor-to-shooter node for armoured warfare, counter-air-defence tasks and command-and-control support. The UK acquired 50 AH-64Es through a Foreign Military Sale worth about $2.3 billion, with Initial Operating Capability declared in May 2023 and Full Operating Capability planned for early 2026.
Chinook, A400M Atlas and C-17 are affected in a different but still measurable way. RAF Chinook helicopters can carry up to 55 troops or 10 tonnes of freight, use a triple-hook external load system, and are armed with two M134 Miniguns and one M60 machine gun for self-defence and landing-zone suppression. Atlas provides tactical and strategic lift, carrying a 30-tonne payload over 2,400 nautical miles or up to 37 tonnes maximum, and can operate from short, unprepared or semi-prepared strips. C-17 provides heavier long-range lift, carrying up to 45,360 kg over 4,500 miles and supporting combat, peacekeeping, humanitarian and aeromedical missions. These aircraft do not deliver the same direct weapons effect as Typhoon or Apache, but they move the personnel, ammunition, ground equipment and repair material that allow armed units to remain deployed.
The Leonardo award also fits a wider UK sustainment pattern rather than standing alone. In April 2026, Boeing Defence UK received an £879 million three-year Rotary Wing Enterprise contract for integrated in-service support of Apache AH-64E and Chinook helicopters, covering maintenance, technical services, logistics support and training. In February 2026, Rolls-Royce received a £563 million five-year Typhoon Engine Support Solution for EJ200 engine maintenance, repair, overhaul, spares and ground equipment, covering a Typhoon fleet identified at 130 aircraft. In January 2026, the UK also placed a £453.5 million contract with BAE Systems, Leonardo UK and Parker Meggitt for 40 ECRS Mk2 AESA radars for RAF Tranche 3 Typhoons. Read together with the new consumables contract, the pattern is not a single procurement headline but a layered attempt to protect aircraft availability, engine serviceability, radar modernization and weapons employment across the UK air order of battle.
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The United Kingdom has awarded Leonardo UK a £27 million contract to supply critical consumable spares for Typhoon FGR4 fighters, Apache AH-64E attack helicopters, Chinook helicopters, A400M Atlas transports and C-17 airlifters, in a move announced on June 19, 2026, that directly supports fleet readiness and sortie generation. The agreement can rise to £70 million over seven years and covers around 11,000 NATO Stock Numbers, showing a broad effort to prevent small but essential parts from slowing aircraft availability.
The contract supports aircraft used on live operations, including in the Middle East, where shortages of certified consumables can disrupt maintenance, weapon loading and daily flight schedules. By strengthening access to these components, the UK aims to reduce avoidable downtime across key combat, lift and transport fleets while improving operational resilience.
Related topic: US approves $1.5 billion UH-60M Black Hawk helicopter sale to Austria.
Leonardo UK has received a £27 million contract, potentially rising to £70 million, to supply critical consumable spares for UK Typhoon, Apache, Chinook, A400M Atlas and C-17 aircraft, strengthening fleet availability, sortie generation and operational readiness (Picture source: UK MoD).
The technical significance lies in the category of material being managed. Blind rivets, washers, cable ties, masks and similar consumables are low-cost items compared with missiles, engines or radars, but they sit inside the airworthiness chain that allows maintainers to close access panels, secure wiring looms, replace worn fittings, complete minor structural repairs, and return aircraft to a cleared configuration after inspection. The new arrangement separates fast-moving items, which Leonardo will manage proactively against stores availability, from slow-moving items handled through a more traditional demand-led model. It also shifts more equipment management to depot level, with Leonardo responsible for modelling, forecasting, stock procurement and obsolescence management. In practical terms, this reduces the chance that a Typhoon, Apache or Chinook is unavailable because a minor certified component is missing from the supply chain.
For the Royal Air Force, the most sensitive combat-air effect concerns the Typhoon FGR4, which remains central to UK Quick Reaction Alert, NATO air policing and expeditionary strike tasks. The aircraft’s armament includes Meteor, AMRAAM and ASRAAM air-to-air missiles, Paveway IV, Brimstone 2 and Storm Shadow air-to-surface weapons, and a Mauser 27 mm cannon, supported by ECR 90 radar, PIRATE infrared search-and-track equipment, electronic countermeasures, missile approach warning, expendables and a towed radar decoy. This means the spare-parts contract indirectly supports both the aircraft’s defensive counter-air role and its strike role: missile launchers, pylons, avionics bays, cooling, electrical harnesses and access panels all have to remain serviceable for weapons to be uploaded, tested and released under operational rules.
The armament details matter because Typhoon’s weapons impose different sustainment demands. Meteor is a 190 kg beyond-visual-range air-to-air missile, 3.7 m long and 178 mm in diameter, using a ramjet propulsion concept that preserves energy later in the engagement, improving the probability of reaching manoeuvring aircraft at distance. ASRAAM is lighter, at 88 kg, 2.9 m long and 166 mm in diameter, and is designed for within-visual-range engagements with lock-on-before-launch and lock-on-after-launch modes, which makes aircraft helmet cueing and rapid launch preparation important. Brimstone weighs 50 kg, measures 1.8 m in length and 180 mm in diameter, and uses millimetric-wave radar and semi-active laser guidance with a tandem shaped-charge warhead, giving Typhoon a precision option against moving armour, fast vehicles, bunkers and some maritime targets. Consumable spares do not increase missile range, but they help preserve the maintenance tempo needed to keep armed aircraft cycling through alert, strike and training missions.
The Apache AH-64E portion is equally relevant for British Army combat aviation because the helicopter’s weapons are carried close to the tactical edge and depend on high aircraft availability during land operations. The AH-64E is armed with a 30 mm automatic cannon, wing-mounted 70 mm Hydra rockets and Hellfire missiles; a standard fit includes 16 Hellfire missiles, 70 Hydra-70 rockets and 1,200 rounds of 30 mm ammunition. Its Longbow radar can detect and classify up to 256 potential targets, display 128 to the crew and prioritise the top 16 threats in seconds, while optical and thermal sights support target identification at night and in low visibility. Those figures show why the helicopter is not only an armed escort asset but also a sensor-to-shooter node for armoured warfare, counter-air-defence tasks and command-and-control support. The UK acquired 50 AH-64Es through a Foreign Military Sale worth about $2.3 billion, with Initial Operating Capability declared in May 2023 and Full Operating Capability planned for early 2026.
Chinook, A400M Atlas and C-17 are affected in a different but still measurable way. RAF Chinook helicopters can carry up to 55 troops or 10 tonnes of freight, use a triple-hook external load system, and are armed with two M134 Miniguns and one M60 machine gun for self-defence and landing-zone suppression. Atlas provides tactical and strategic lift, carrying a 30-tonne payload over 2,400 nautical miles or up to 37 tonnes maximum, and can operate from short, unprepared or semi-prepared strips. C-17 provides heavier long-range lift, carrying up to 45,360 kg over 4,500 miles and supporting combat, peacekeeping, humanitarian and aeromedical missions. These aircraft do not deliver the same direct weapons effect as Typhoon or Apache, but they move the personnel, ammunition, ground equipment and repair material that allow armed units to remain deployed.
The Leonardo award also fits a wider UK sustainment pattern rather than standing alone. In April 2026, Boeing Defence UK received an £879 million three-year Rotary Wing Enterprise contract for integrated in-service support of Apache AH-64E and Chinook helicopters, covering maintenance, technical services, logistics support and training. In February 2026, Rolls-Royce received a £563 million five-year Typhoon Engine Support Solution for EJ200 engine maintenance, repair, overhaul, spares and ground equipment, covering a Typhoon fleet identified at 130 aircraft. In January 2026, the UK also placed a £453.5 million contract with BAE Systems, Leonardo UK and Parker Meggitt for 40 ECRS Mk2 AESA radars for RAF Tranche 3 Typhoons. Read together with the new consumables contract, the pattern is not a single procurement headline but a layered attempt to protect aircraft availability, engine serviceability, radar modernization and weapons employment across the UK air order of battle.
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