Japan to relax export curbs to allow overseas sales of joint jet fighter

Reuters

Published Mar 13, 2024 08:02

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan will tweak its military equipment transfer rules to allow exports of the jet fighter it is developing with Britain and Italy, the country's leader said on Wednesday, removing an obstacle that could have stymied the project.

The joint Global Combat Air Programme (GCAP) last year established a joint organisation and industry group led by Britain's BAE Systems (LON:BAES) PLC, Japan's Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and Italy's Leonardo that aims to deploy an advanced fighter by the middle of the next decade.

Without a loosening of Japan's military export rules, which ban overseas sales of lethal equipment, Tokyo's partners would have been unable to sell the aircraft abroad, which would cut unit costs by spreading development expenses across more planes.

After months of political wrangling between Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's ruling Liberal Democratic Party and its coalition partner Komeito, the government has agreed to allow exports to countries that have defence equipment transfer agreements with Japan and are not embroiled in any conflicts, Kishida told the country's parliament.

Each export will also require Cabinet approval and the rule change will be limited to the GCAP fighter, he added.