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Ukraine demand boosts Central Europe’s arms businesses, as groups scramble for worker


From building apartments for new employees to offering retired workers free canteen meals to share their expertise, Central Europe’s arms manufacturers are scrambling for new ways to cope with the biggest boom since the end of the Cold War.

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Facing some of the tightest labor markets in Europe, weapons makers in Poland and the Czech Republic are launching or expanding programs to recruit and train new workers after the Ukraine war drove a spike in demand for their productions.

Central Europe’s arms industry has been churning out guns, shells and other military supplies at the fastest pace since the fall of the Berlin Wall as companies ac-celerate production to supply Ukraine and feed demand globally as countries boost defense spending.

Take Czech ammunition and artillery shell producer STV Group. It has agreed with the city closest to its biggest plant in Policka, some 200 kilometers (125 miles) southeast of Prague, to build company-financed apartments for new hires, the company’s chairman David Hac told Reuters.

The company has also begun offering retired workers meals at the canteen so they can share knowledge of recently re-started lines producing Soviet-era am-munition for Ukraine, he added.

“This informal exchange of ideas has excellent and immediate effects on the effi-ciency of production processes, especially when you are restarting production of products that have been out of production for a long time,” Hac said.

The Czech Republic and Poland boast among the lowest unemployment rates in the European Union at 2.7 percent for June, well below the EU average jobless figure of 5.9 percent for the same period, according to Eurostat data.

Jiri Hynek, president and executive director of the Defence and Security Industry Association (DSIA) of the Czech Republic, told Reuters a lack of workers could push production out of central Europe. With enough labor and materials, Czech companies could boost production by up to 20 percent, he estimated.

The association, which represents more than 160 companies, said exports ac-counted for around 90 percent of the industry’s production of weapons and mili-tary-related supplies.

Of that, Hynek estimated that supplies of military equipment to Ukraine accounted for 40 percent of exports.

As demand grows, the need for younger workers with technical skills will only in-tensify for an industry that depends on innovation to keep growing, Hynek added.

“We have an ageing population, ageing researchers, developers, innovators, and technical and natural sciences (departments) producing an absolute lack of peo-ple to use,” Hynek said. “We need growth but we have nowhere to take workers from.”

Key weapons pipeline

Czech explosives maker Explosia – which employs around 600 workers and posted a record $55 million (1.2 billion crowns) in revenue last year – told Reuters it is expanding cooperation with local universities and speeding automation to offset a lack of workers at the company, which is known for producing the plastic explosive Semtex.

Polish military technology company WB Group started hiring women last year on a larger scale on assembly lines previously comprising mostly male workers. The company – which employs more than 2,000 staff and generated $150 million (602 million zloty) in revenue last year – produces unmanned drones and missile sys-tems.

“With the increase in orders we had to change the production system,” the company’s spokesman told Reuters.

Central Europe represents an important pipeline for Ukraine’s military. Of the 29 states that supplied major weapons in 2022, Poland and the Czech Republic ac-counted for more than 20 percent of the total Ukrainian arms imports by volume, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

The Czech government said that – including weapons supplied from its own stores – the country sent military supplies worth $1.84 billion (40 billion Czech crowns) to Ukraine in the first 12 months of the war. That included 89 tanks, 226 armored vehicles, 38 howitzers along with air defense systems, helicopters, am-munition and rockets, it said.

The Czech defense ministry told Reuters, without providing specific details, that the strongest demand from Ukraine was now for large-caliber ammunition for Soviet-era weapons along with western standard artillery, rocket propelled gre-nades, and tank ammunition.

The government has also started discussions about employing some of the hun-dreds of thousands of Ukrainian refugees – most of whom are women and chil-dren – living in the country to help companies struggling to find workers, the de-fense ministry said.

Pitching patriotism

Other sectors in Poland – emerging Europe’s biggest economy – and the Czech Republic have struggled in recent years to find workers: a situation that has driv-en up labor costs and dampened growth.

But the issue is a new one for the arms industry, where the workforce shrank in the wake of the Communist era.

Between the mid-1980s and 2000, employment in Poland’s arms industry fell by 76 percent, according data cited by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

“Of course, you need raw materials and supplies but the lack of skilled workers is now the main problem hampering the expansion of production,” Czech independ-ent defense analyst Lukas Visingr told Reuters.

Poland’s state-owned PGZ – which controls dozens of companies making sup-plies that include weapons, ammunition, armored transporters and unmanned air systems – is targeting employees in a wide range of industries using social media ads, the group’s head of human resources, Artur Zaborek, told Reuters.

The company – which employs more than 18,000 people – also plans a campaign next year aimed at convincing Poles employed in Scandinavian shipyards to re-turn home to work on new contracts to build ships for Poland’s navy using ads that highlight the opportunity to boost national defense and work closer to home, Zaborek said.

“The geopolitical situation has led to the largest armaments projects in history for the group, which means demand for skilled workers has increased dramatically,” Zaborek said.

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