Safran Compressor Components Plant Strengthens Belgium’s Aerospace Engine Supply Chain

Safran invests €125mn in Belgium compressor components plant to support LEAP, GEnx and GE9X engines.
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Safran Compressor Components Plant Strengthens Belgium’s Aerospace Engine Supply Chain
Safran

Safran compressor components plant investment in Belgium will expand European aerospace manufacturing capacity as aircraft engine demand continues to rise. French aerospace manufacturer Safran will invest €125 million in a new compressor components production site in Welkenraedt, in partnership with Belgian and Walloon public authorities.

The Safran compressor components plant is scheduled to start operations in 2028 and will be operated by a new subsidiary, Safran Booster Components. Safran Aero Boosters will hold 56% of the project, while Wallonie Entreprendre will hold 33% and the Belgian Federal Holding and Investment will hold 11%.

The investment reflects a broader effort to remove bottlenecks in aircraft engine supply chains. As Airbus and Boeing raise production rates on major aircraft platforms, engine makers need more capacity for high-precision components, machining, inspection and advanced manufacturing.

New Welkenraedt Site Targets Engine Production Bottlenecks

The new facility will be housed in an 18,000m² building formerly used by heating, cooling and refrigeration equipment maker Copeland. This gives Safran a ready industrial base to expand component output without starting from a greenfield site.

The Safran compressor components plant will support demand from major civil aircraft engine programmes, including the CFM International LEAP engine. It will also support GE Aerospace’s GEnx and GE9X programmes.

This matters because engine supply has limited aircraft build-rate increases in recent years. Certain components have remained difficult to scale, while aftermarket demand has also pulled engines and parts away from new aircraft production.

LEAP, GEnx and GE9X Demand Drives Capacity Expansion

The investment is closely tied to expected production increases for the Airbus A320neo, Boeing 737 MAX, Boeing 787 and Boeing 777X. Higher aircraft build rates will require a steep increase in engine output over the coming years.

Compressor components are critical because they sit at the heart of engine performance, efficiency and durability. Their production depends on precision engineering, tight tolerances, reliable materials supply and qualified manufacturing processes.

For Belgium, the project strengthens the country’s position in the aerospace manufacturing chain. For Safran, it adds capacity at a time when engine makers are under pressure to support both newbuild aircraft and growing maintenance demand.

The Metalnomist Commentary

Safran’s Belgium investment shows that aerospace growth is being constrained by component-level capacity, not only final assembly. The next competitive advantage in aircraft engines will come from suppliers that can scale precision parts, advanced materials and qualified production without compromising reliability.

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