At a munitions factory in northeast England run by BAE Systems, production is running at full speed thanks to the war in Ukraine and an increasingly dark outlook for geopolitics.
Inside the large factory in Washington — filled with the smell of sulphur and dust — 14 machines and 340 workers forge and paint artillery, mortars and tank ammunitions.
Observing blocks of metal heated to 1,100 degrees Celsius (2,012 degrees Fahrenheit) and which are handled by gigantic metal pliers — or watching workers carefully polish parts for hundreds of mortars — one almost forgets their deadly purpose.
Empty shells are transported to BAE’s Glascoed site in Wales, where explosive formula is added ahead of their delivery to customers.
BAE in August announced a record order book and half-year surge in net profits of 57 percent, as defence spending among Western governments has jumped following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Its shares have surged since the war between Hamas and Israel broke out last month.
“The world seems to be getting less stable rather than more stable,” Steve Cardew, business development director at the British maker of military equipment, told reporters on a recent visit to BAE’s Washington site between the cities of Newcastle and Sunderland.
“So that would suggest that the demand for munitions is going to increase and it’s going to be a sustained sort of scenario for us.”
BAE on Monday issued a bright earnings outlook on its “increasing exposure to structurally growing defence markets” and “a time of heightening geopolitical risk”.
The group has ploughed more cash this year in “new investment in munitions manufacturing capacity”, it added.
Cardew said production of 155 millimetre calibre shells will have risen eight-fold by 2025 compared with shortly before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine early last year.
“What we’ve seen this year has been unprecedented, really 430 million (pounds) of additional orders. That’s exceptional for us, and clearly is a reflection of the global sort of market we now face,” said Cardew.
Two of the contracts concern mostly 155 millimetre calibres, widely used in the Ukraine conflict. The latest, worth GBP20 million ($24 million) is for small ammunition.
A much larger and long-term contract that kicked in this year — known as the Next Generation Munitions Solution — is worth GBP2.4 billion and sees BAE suppling munitions to Britain’s Ministry of Defence over 15 years.
The UK government in September said it had delivered more than 300,000 artillery shells to Ukraine with tens of thousands more planned by the end of the year.
In northeast England, a former industrial heavyweight, the unemployment rate is higher than the national average, according to official data.
And that is why some do not think twice about working in a factory making weapons.
BAE has increased staffing to meet the surge in munitions demand. It currently employs more than 93,000 workers across 40 countries. Close to half of these are in the UK.
BAE’s share price has almost doubled since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — and by more than 10 percent in the wake of the Israel-Hamas war that began early October.
BAE and its peers are set to keep on benefitting.
“It is highly likely that they will continue to profit from an increase in conflict in the world, to the detriment of the civilians caught up in these conflicts, on the receiving end of their weapons,” Sam Perlo-Freeman, research coordinator at Campaign Against Arms Trade, told AFP.
If London’s support for Ukraine in its war with neighbouring Russia seems little contested by the British public, it is not the case regarding the Israel-Hamas conflict.
On Friday, dozens of trade unionists blocked a BAE Systems facility in Rochester, southeast England, accusing the company of making components for military planes used by Israel’s army in its bombing of Gaza.