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Drones: Industry & Defence
5JUL

AeroVironment opens two more NATO markets

2 min read
10:21UTC

AeroVironment routed a $30m order into Germany's LARUS programme through NATO's procurement agency on 7 July, then won an Italian MQ-31A type designation on 13 July, its first programme-of-record foothold in Italy.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

AeroVironment reached German and Italian buyers in one week through NATO's shared procurement rail and an Italian type designation.

AeroVironment routed a $30 million Puma Systems Stack order into Germany's LARUS counter-drone programme through the NATO Support and Procurement Agency (NSPA) on Tuesday 7 July. Six days later, on Monday 13 July, the Italian Ministry of Defence granted the company an MQ-31A type designation. Both count as European market access, not US federal revenue, and that distinction is the point.

NSPA is the multi-vendor cross-border rail that lets a US maker sell into an individual NATO member without negotiating a bilateral foreign military sale, the slower government-to-government route. It is the same channel Red Cat used for its Black Widow order , so AeroVironment is following a path already worn by a smaller rival rather than cutting a new one.

The Italian designation goes further than the German order. A type designation is the regulatory approval that lets an air arm field and sustain a platform under its own programme of record, the gate a sale alone does not clear. Italy has not bought from AeroVironment on this beat before, so the MQ-31A stamp turns a prospective customer into one that can now operate and support the aircraft for years. NSPA delivered the order, the Italian ministry delivered the licence to fly it, both inside a single week.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

AeroVironment makes drones and counter-drone systems for the US military and is now expanding into Europe. In Germany, it sold $30 million worth of equipment into a German air-defence programme called LARUS, using a NATO agency called NSPA that lets member countries buy from an approved list of suppliers without negotiating a one-off government-to-government deal each time. Separately, in Italy, the defence ministry gave one of AeroVironment's aircraft an official type designation, MQ-31A, which works like a formal certification for use by that country's armed forces. Together, these show a single American company opening two new European government customers in the space of a week.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

AeroVironment's simultaneous German and Italian market entry within a single week is possible because NSPA and national type-designation processes are separate approval tracks that do not require sequencing: a vendor can clear a NATO agency's multi-vendor catalogue in one country while a bilateral defence ministry runs its own certification in another, with neither approval waiting on the other.

That parallel-track structure, not any single national decision, is what let AeroVironment open two markets in the same week rather than one country at a time.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    NSPA-routed sales let AeroVironment scale into new NATO markets without separate bilateral government-to-government negotiations for each country.

  • Precedent

    Italy's MQ-31A type designation gives AeroVironment a formal certification precedent that could ease its access to other NATO members' domestic type-approval processes.

First Reported In

Update #15 · Two $500m drone deals, still no winner

AeroVironment· 14 Jul 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
AeroVironment opens two more NATO markets
A type designation clears the regulatory gate to field and sustain a platform, so Italy becomes a standing buyer rather than a one-off sale.
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