UK MoD orders Airbus H145 helicopters to bolster training in jungle warfare 

Aircraft Airbus H145 Jupiter helicopter at RAF Shawbury
Airbus

In the United Kingdom (UK), the Ministry of Defense (MoD) has ordered six new Airbus H145 helicopters, to be used in part to support military training in jungle warfare. 

The new order was announced by Airbus Helicopters on April 19, 2024, It comes as the UK looks to renew its rotary fleet and cut the number of different helicopter types in service.  

The new aircraft will be deployed to Cyprus, primarily for emergency response duties, and to Brunei to support military training. They will replace Airbus Pumas currently performing those roles.  

“We congratulate the MoD on this smart acquisition which simultaneously provides the right-sized helicopter for the Cyprus and Brunei requirements, represents excellent value for the UK taxpayer, and is another key step in the rationalization of types in the transport helicopter fleet,” said Airbus’ Helicopters in the UK Managing Director Lenny Brown. 

Brown added: “The H145 Jupiter, and its sister H135 Juno, continue to demonstrate exceptional reliability and versatility in the training role in the Military Flying Training System – MFTS – and will bring these crucial attributes to their new tasks.” 

The new helicopters will be delivered in 2025 to serve in parallel with 29 H135s and seven H145s in the Defense Helicopter Flying School, which trains all UK military pilots as part of MFTS at the Royal Air Force’s Shawbury base.   

The latest version of Airbus’ best-selling H145 adds an innovative five-bladed rotor to the multi-mission H145, increasing the useful load of the helicopter by 150 kg. 

Worldwide, there are over 1,675 H145 family helicopters in service, totaling over 7.6 million flight hours.   

    1 comment

  1. Excellent insight into how modern defense aviation programs are evolving through smarter fleet modernization and operational efficiency. The UK MoD’s continued investment in Airbus platforms clearly reflects the growing importance of reliability, rapid deployment capability, and lifecycle support in mission-critical operations.

    Working in the industrial procurement and automation sector at Industrial Parts Distribution, I can strongly relate to the emphasis on system standardization, reduced maintenance complexity, and long-term operational sustainability highlighted in this article. These are the same principles driving innovation across aerospace, defense, and industrial automation supply chains today.

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