Updated
Updated · BBC.com · May 15
Aeralis Enters Administration, Cutting 30 Jobs as Red Arrows Jet Bid Collapses
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · May 15

Aeralis Enters Administration, Cutting 30 Jobs as Red Arrows Jet Bid Collapses

1 articles · Updated · BBC.com · May 15
  • Aeralis filed for administration on Friday, costing about 30 jobs and derailing the British startup’s push to build a UK-made replacement for the RAF’s Hawk trainer fleet.
  • Cashflow pressure intensified after delays to the UK Defence Investment Plan, the loss of backing from main investor Barzan Holdings amid the US-Israeli war with Iran, and a French jet deal that failed to materialise.
  • The Ministry of Defence said the fast-jet trainer programme is still ongoing and no procurement decision has been made, with BAE Systems, Leonardo and other suppliers still in contention.
  • Aeralis had argued its programme could create 4,000 UK jobs and £600 million in annual exports, but its aircraft remained only a digital design and still needed government backing to reach production.
  • The collapse adds pressure on Prime Minister Keir Starmer to publish the delayed defence investment plan as Britain weighs lower-risk trainer options that could be delivered before Hawk retirement in 2030.
A British jet firm collapsed over a 'paper plane' design. Was this a major blow to UK industry or a narrow escape for taxpayers?
As a key foreign investor fled due to war, is the UK's sovereign defence ambition fatally undermined by its reliance on foreign cash?