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As arms sales boom, Norway's Kongsberg opens rocket factory

Norwegian defence manufacturer Kongsberg Gruppen opened a new rocket factory on Thursday to satisfy rising need for weapons from Western countries spooked by Russia's war in Ukraine and China's. modernisation of its militaries.

NATO allies are racing to increase their own production of. weapons, ammunition and missiles, partially to provide Ukraine however. likewise to renew stocks and have the ability to counter new risks.

The choice to develop the plant, nestled amongst pine-covered. hills outside Kongsberg about 90 km (56 miles) southwest of. Oslo, was taken in 2021, before Russia's full-blown invasion of. Ukraine, when Kongsberg saw increased demand for its missiles.

A few of that demand originated from the U.S. Navy, picking. Kongsberg's Naval Strike Missile (NSM) for its fleet, an. anti-ship rocket with a variety of 250 km.

Then Ukraine began, and it wasn't a surprise to us that. the need increased, Eirik Lie, Kongsberg's head of defence. and aerospace, told after opening the plant, which will. employ 1,200 individuals.

More akin to a huge tech laboratory than a military arsenal, the. center cost 640 million crowns ($ 61 million), with the. Norwegian government installing 200 million crowns and the. European Union 10 million.

In one gleaming-white room right out of a sci-fi movie,. 24 robotic arms hanging from the ceiling will help build the. NSM, and its cousin the Joint Strike Rocket (JSM), a cruise. rocket for Lockheed Martin's F35 fighter jets.

The plant will produce numerous numerous missiles per. year, Lie said, decreasing to give a particular number. Neither. would he state just how much production was expanding by, just that. growth was rapid.

There is more to come. We are seeking to increase our. production, stated Lie. We are looking at the U.S. and Australia. as options.

Kongsberg decreases to state whether its NSM has actually been donated. to Ukraine by some NATO allies, but reported in 2023. that the U.S. was dealing with giving some of its NSMs to Ukraine. to help beat Russia's naval blockade in the Black Sea.

The NSM is currently used by 14 countries, 11 of which are. in NATO or the EU, said Kongsberg.

(source: Reuters)