According to a recent LinkedIn post from Helsing, the company has highlighted several developments since the last Munich Security Conference, tied to its focus on European defence sovereignty and manufacturing scale-up. The post describes the introduction of CA-1 Europa, presented as an autonomous fighter jet controlled by Centaur, the firm’s reinforcement learning–based AI pilot.
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The post also notes that Helsing has expanded HX-2 mass production to a rate of 1,000 strike drones per month, indicating a significant ramp-up in hardware output capacity. In addition, it references the opening of a “resilience factory” in Plymouth, U.K., which is expected to produce the SG-1 subsurface glider as part of a broader multi-domain defence offering.
The LinkedIn content further suggests a changing macro environment, pointing to higher European defence budgets, faster procurement cycles, and rapid capability development across the regional defence ecosystem. For investors, this backdrop could imply a more supportive demand environment for Helsing’s AI-enabled defence systems and a potential for stronger order visibility, though specific contracts, revenues, and financial metrics are not disclosed.
By emphasizing both scaled production and new platforms, the post may signal Helsing’s intent to position itself as a key supplier within Europe’s evolving defence-industrial base. If sustained, increased defence spending and accelerated procurement in Europe could enhance the company’s long-term growth prospects and strengthen its competitive position against both traditional defence primes and emerging defence-tech peers.

