Taiwan's drone suppliers are seeking deeper ties with Western defense contractors and Ukraine's wartime drone industry, as export demand accelerates and buyers look for alternatives to China-dependent supply chains.
Jiin Ming Industry showcased its tactical fixed-wing drone platform and related technologies at a Taiwan drone alliance event on June 9, 2026, presenting a flight-ready multirotor called VIPER and a fixed-wing system named SABER as it pursues overseas expansion into the US, Japan, Europe, and Southeast Asia with alliance support. The event, organized by the Taiwan Excellence Drone International Business Opportunities Alliance and convened in Taichung, gathered domestic drone firms, supply chain partners, and representatives from industry, government, academia, and research to discuss export and supply-chain strategies.
T3EX Global Holdings reported consolidated revenue of NT$2.099 billion (approx. US$66.4 million) in May 2026, up 11.13% month-over-month and 10.70% year-over-year, driven by a rebound in high-tech logistics and cross-border transport, the firm announced. The company said cumulative consolidated revenue for January-May 2026 totaled NT$8.835 billion, a 3.73% decline from the same period a year earlier.
Taiwan's drone supply chain is notching fresh wins, with downstream players such as Thunder Tiger and Taiwan's Aerospace Industrial Development Corporation (AIDC) continuing to secure orders while upstream suppliers, especially chipmakers, are quietly expanding their deployments and market share. For military and commercial drones in particular, Taiwanese chip vendors are now working closely with local customers as well as customers in Europe and the US to integrate a range of on-board image-processing and AI recognition modules, plus applications such as flight control and ground control stations.
Sercomm Corporation said its revenue for the first five months of 2026 hit a record NT$30 billion (US$950 million), up 55% from a year earlier, signaling continued momentum in telecom and networking markets that could matter for global broadband customers, suppliers, and investors. The company said growth is being driven by AI-enabled applications, new products, and expansion into additional markets.
China has successfully launched a new commercial heavy-lift rocket designed to support the country's rapidly expanding satellite-constellation ambitions, marking another step in Beijing's effort to build a lower-cost alternative to Western space-launch providers.
Europe's push to strengthen defense self-sufficiency is beginning to translate into tangible opportunities for military technology suppliers, with Taiwan-based rugged PC makers expecting a meaningful pickup in orders starting from 2026 as procurement programs move from planning to execution.
Aerospace Industrial Development Corp. said on June 10 that it had secured NT$12.8 billion (approx. US$400 million) in new orders in the first half of 2026, driven by demand for aircraft engines, including both renewals and new projects under long-term contracts. The firm reported first-quarter 2026 revenue of about NT$7.59 billion, roughly flat year-over-year, and said its Brave Eagle advanced jet trainer program remains on track to deliver all 66 aircraft by year-end despite ongoing supply-chain disruptions.
Anduril Industries has sharply expanded its Taiwan supply chain, increasing direct purchases from local suppliers 15-fold in 2025 as the US defense technology company deepens cooperation with Taiwanese partners on drones and other autonomous defense systems.
Sysgration expanded its industrial PC and edge-computing business into drone ground control systems and smart glasses, and said shipments of IPCs and drone GCS flight control systems scaled up to help lift May 2026 revenue. The firm reported consolidated revenue of about NT$308 million (approx. US$9.7 milllion) in May 2026, up 0.96% month-over-month and 15.29% year-over-year, and said related businesses now accounted for nearly 40% of revenue as IPC and drone shipments increased.
The US Department of Defense has updated its list of companies identified as Chinese military companies operating in the US, adding a wide range of technology, telecom, semiconductor, drone, and artificial intelligence firms.
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