Taiwan must tap into the global uncrewed aerial vehicle (UAV) market to obtain the capital necessary to develop a self-sufficient combat drone industry, experts said.
As defense analysts have speculated that China might invade Taiwan in 2027 or 2032, the nation must complete the decoupling of its drone supply chains from China in the next few years, Geosat Aerospace & Technology Inc (經緯航太科技) CEO Lo Cheng-fang (羅正方) said.
The ability to produce combat drones in wartime is crucial for Taiwan’s survival, but the nation’s UAV industry is still in its infancy, said Lo, who is also chairman of the Chiayi-based Asia UAV AI Innovation Application R&D Center.
Photo: CNA
The government should support the domestic industry to ensure Taiwan’s drone supply chains remain unbroken in the event of a military conflict with China, he said.
Drones are an integral part of President William Lai’s (賴清德) Five Trusted Industry Sectors, a category consisting of the semiconductor, artificial intelligence (AI), military, security and surveillance, and next-generation communications industries.
The administration aims to make Taiwan “the Asian hub of UAV supply chains for global democracies,” he said in his inaugural address on May 20.
These supply chains are made of about 40 Taiwanese firms that produce about a dozen drone models altogether, government data showed.
The Taiwanese drone sector was worth an estimated NT$2.86 billion (US$87.15 million) last year, while the global drone industry’s value is expected to reach US$80 billion by 2030.
Chiayi Economic Development Department Director Chiang Zhen-wei (江振瑋) said the global drone industry is split in two, with one side that uses Chinese supply chains and another that does not.
Because of those who have decoupled from China, there is a large opportunity for the domestic drone industry if it is prepared to seize it, he said.
The companies that are part of Chiayi’s drone center represent a complete UAV ecosystem, but the industry would still have to carve out an export market, Chiang said.
The operational costs of automated equipment capable of mass-producing reliable, quality components at scale cannot be funded by the domestic market alone, he added.
Despite Taiwan’s technical prowess, manufacturers cannot be expected to wade into the drone business just to supply domestic demand, said Lo Cheng-ying (駱正穎), a professor of mechanical engineering at National Formosa University.
“Becoming a part of the supply chain for democracies will be crucial going forward,” he said.
National Chung Cheng University strategic studies professor Lin Tai-ho (林泰和) said drones have significant battlefield applications and UAV manufacturing is an industry of ever-increasing importance strategically.
The Taiwanese UAV sector must develop an export market to supplement military contracts, especially as cheaper Chinese parts cannot be used, he said.
The Lai administration made the right call in pursuing the capability to manufacture drones independently of China’s supply chains, even if it is more expensive, Lin added.
Meanwhile, the government would play a key role in coordinating with its industrial partners, Hsuan Yuan Tech Co (璿元科技) CEO Chou Yu-tuan (周玉端) said.
The government must pay attention to industrial requirements in designing projects, as the current approach is leading to the proliferation of non-standard platforms with little commonality, which increases production difficulties and costs, he said.
The contract-issuing bodies of the government frequently demand changes to a project, such as its technical specifications and intended role, further adding to the chaos, he said.
Taiwan Swarm Innovation Inc (臺灣希望創新) CEO Li Chih-ching (李志清) said Washington is looking for allies to replace China in drone supply chains.
Taiwan has the technological capabilities to make drones, but Taiwanese systems are two to three times more expensive than their Chinese counterparts, he said.
Expanding into the global market would enable domestic UAV makers to benefit from the economy of scale and lower their prices to competitive levels, Li said.
However, the Taiwanese UAV sector is unlikely to be competitively priced compared with China, he said, adding the industry should concentrate on making drones for special applications for customers that cannot use systems that have Chinese parts.
AGING: As of last month, people aged 65 or older accounted for 20.06 percent of the total population and the number of couples who got married fell by 18,685 from 2024 Taiwan has surpassed South Korea as the country least willing to have children, with an annual crude birthrate of 4.62 per 1,000 people, Ministry of the Interior data showed yesterday. The nation was previously ranked the second-lowest country in terms of total fertility rate, or the average number of children a woman has in her lifetime. However, South Korea’s fertility rate began to recover from 2023, with total fertility rate rising from 0.72 and estimated to reach 0.82 to 0.85 by last year, and the crude birthrate projected at 6.7 per 1,000 people. Japan’s crude birthrate was projected to fall below six,
Conflict with Taiwan could leave China with “massive economic disruption, catastrophic military losses, significant social unrest, and devastating sanctions,” a US think tank said in a report released on Monday. The German Marshall Fund released a report titled If China Attacks Taiwan: The Consequences for China of “Minor Conflict” and “Major War” Scenarios. The report details the “massive” economic, military, social and international costs to China in the event of a minor conflict or major war with Taiwan, estimating that the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) could sustain losses of more than half of its active-duty ground forces, including 100,000 troops. Understanding Chinese
US President Donald Trump in an interview with the New York Times published on Thursday said that “it’s up to” Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) what China does on Taiwan, but that he would be “very unhappy” with a change in the “status quo.” “He [Xi] considers it to be a part of China, and that’s up to him what he’s going to be doing, but I’ve expressed to him that I would be very unhappy if he did that, and I don’t think he’ll do that. I hope he doesn’t do that,” Trump said. Trump made the comments in the context
SELF-DEFENSE: Tokyo has accelerated its spending goal and its defense minister said the nation needs to discuss whether it should develop nuclear-powered submarines China is ramping up objections to what it sees as Japan’s desire to acquire nuclear weapons, despite Tokyo’s longstanding renunciation of such arms, deepening another fissure in the two neighbors’ increasingly tense ties. In what appears to be a concerted effort, China’s foreign and defense ministries issued statements on Thursday condemning alleged remilitarism efforts by Tokyo. The remarks came as two of the country’s top think tanks jointly issued a 29-page report framing actions by “right-wing forces” in Japan as posing a “serious threat” to world peace. While that report did not define “right-wing forces,” the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs was