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| GE Aerospace |
GE Aerospace European manufacturing investment will strengthen the company’s engine production footprint across key European sites in 2026. The US aerospace manufacturer plans to invest €113 million, or about $130 million, to expand capacity and accelerate advanced manufacturing capabilities across the region.
The GE Aerospace European manufacturing investment will be concentrated mainly in Italy, which will receive €77 million. Poland will receive €15 million, the UK €10 million, the Czech Republic €8 million, and Romania €3 million.
The investment also reflects a wider aerospace supply chain challenge. GE plans to hire more than 1,000 workers across Europe this year as engine manufacturers compete for skilled labor, machining capacity, testing capability, and advanced production expertise.
Engine Test Cells and Machining Capacity Target Aerospace Bottlenecks
GE Aerospace will direct a large share of the spending toward state-of-the-art engine test cells, advanced machining equipment, additive manufacturing expansion, and facility upgrades. These areas are critical because modern aircraft engines depend on high-precision components, tight process control, and reliable testing capacity.
The GE Aerospace European manufacturing investment will support commercial narrowbody and widebody engine programs. It will also strengthen military engine programs, giving the company more flexibility across civil and defense aerospace demand.
This matters for metals and advanced materials supply chains because jet engine production relies on nickel superalloys, titanium alloys, precision castings, forged parts, coatings, and heat-resistant components. More machining and additive manufacturing capacity can increase demand for certified aerospace-grade feedstock and high-performance alloy parts.
European Expansion Aligns With Wider US Production Push
GE Aerospace’s European plan follows a larger investment program in the US. The company recently announced another €1 billion-equivalent spending plan for production plants and its supplier base this year, covering new equipment, infrastructure upgrades, expanded testing capacity, and retooling across 29 facilities in 17 US states.
A key part of the US investment will support upgraded high-pressure turbine blade capacity for LEAP engines. GE Aerospace produces LEAP engines through CFM International, its joint venture with France-based Safran Aircraft Engines.
Together, the US and European investments show that GE Aerospace is preparing for sustained engine demand and tighter aerospace supply chains. The strategy points to more capital spending on bottleneck processes such as turbine blades, machining, testing, additive manufacturing, and high-temperature engine components.
The Metalnomist Commentary
GE Aerospace’s investment is not just a capacity expansion. It is a signal that aerospace manufacturing competitiveness now depends on advanced equipment, skilled labor, and secure high-performance materials supply. For specialty metals suppliers, this reinforces the long-term opportunity in titanium, nickel superalloys, precision castings, and additive manufacturing feedstock.

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