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Rheinmetall Wins €54M for Puma Infantry Fighting Vehicle Equipment

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Rheinmetall Wins €54M for Puma Infantry Fighting Vehicle Equipment

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Puma Infantry Fighting Vehicle
Puma Infantry Fighting Vehicle

German defense company Rheinmetall has been awarded orders for additional equipment for the German Army (Deutsches Heer) Puma infantry fighting vehicle. The Düsseldorf-based technology group is to supply spare parts and special tools worth a total of around €54 million, including value added tax. Rheinmetall has thus positioned itself as a long-term service partner of the Bundeswehr for the Puma, a vehicle that will feature in the German Army inventory for many years to come. Of the total order amount, €10 million was already booked in 2019, with the remaining €44 million to be booked during the period 2020 to 2022.

Germany’s Federal Office for Bundeswehr Equipment, Information Technology and In-service Support (Bundesamt für Ausrüstung, Informationstechnik und Nutzung der Bundeswehr) has contracted with the German defence industry, represented by a project management company, to supply an extensive array of equipment. As a member of the consortium responsible for developing and producing the Puma, Rheinmetall’s share of the order comes to approximately €54 million. Under a recently signed framework agreement, shipment of the spare parts, worth around €44 million, is scheduled to begin in mid 2020. Delivery of the special tools, which form part of a separate order worth around €10 million, will also take place during the 2020-2022 timeframe.

 Puma Infantry Fighting Vehicle
Puma Infantry Fighting Vehicle

The Puma is a German infantry fighting vehicle (Schützenpanzer or short SPz) designed to replace the aging Marder IFVs currently in service with the German Army. Production of the first batch of 350 vehicles began in 2010 and is scheduled for completion by August 2020. A second batch of 210 Pumas has received funding. Mass production began on 6 July 2009. The companies responsible for this project are Krauss-Maffei Wegmann and Rheinmetall Landsysteme, who created a joint venture in the form of Projekt System Management GmbH (PSM). The Puma is one of the world’s best-protected IFVs, while still having a high power-to-weight ratio. SAIC offered a derivative of the Puma as its contender in the now cancelled American GCV Infantry Fighting Vehicle program.

Delivery of the last of the 350 Puma IFVs ordered by the Germany Army will take place during the course of 2020. With these vehicles now entering service, the current order for spare parts will assure optimum logistical support and operational readiness. The mainstay of the Bundeswehr’s “System Panzergrenadier” mechanized infantry capability, the Puma infantry fighting vehicle will play a vital role in the array of modernized equipment earmarked for the Very High Joint Readiness Task Force 2023 (VJTF 2023), the NATO spearhead force which the Bundeswehr will be furnishing. In summer 2019 contracts were awarded to a working group for the “System Panzergrenadier VJTF 2023” project, with orders worth over €470 million (including value added tax) going to Rheinmetall.

 Puma Infantry Fighting Vehicle
Puma Infantry Fighting Vehicle

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