CAE
All Research

CAE Demand And Procurement Intelligence Map

Signal map of market spending, regulation, and capacity-building across six demand clusters: sovereign defense air-training, civil narrowbody capacity, distributed low-altitude/AAM ecosystems, U.S. land/multi-domain modernization, maritime synthetic training, and Gulf unmanned/localization demand.

5 sources

This chart shows CAE's highest-value active and pending programs by estimated contract value. Programs are distributed across allied nations, reflecting CAE's core positioning in NATO and Five Eyes training ecosystems [1][2].

High-Value Program Budget Landscape

FAcT = Future Aircrew Training (Canada)TSS = Training Support ServicesTMT = Training Management ToolFAMTS = Future ADF Maintenance Training System (Australia)OWT = One World TerrainRVCT = Rotary-Wing Virtual Collective TrainingSVT = Synthetic Virtual TrainingNGC = Next Generation Combat vehicle simulation

Capability Demand Intensity

CapabilityIntensityMarkets
Civil regulated trainingHighIndia, China
Training centres / managed opsVery highAustralia, Canada, Saudi Arabia, UAE, India
Defense air-domainVery highAustralia, Canada, United States
Land and terrestrialHighUnited States
Maritime and navalHigh strategicUnited States, Japan, Gulf
AAM / low-altitude / UAVVery high strategicChina, United States
Analytics / systems engineeringHigh and risingUnited States, Australia

Key Program Milestones

Nov 2024

COMAC purchases 8 CAE simulators (4× C919, 4× C909)

Jan 2025

India FSTC second Gurugram facility inaugurated

Feb 2025

CAE named Canada FFLIT strategic partner

Jul 2025

Battle Road Digital wins USD 40M NGC contract

CAE is not the prime on this next-gen constructive training program

Sep 2025

First FAcT aircraft accepted by RCAF

CAD 11.2B / 25-year program via SkyAlyne JV

Dec 2025

Australia FAMTS AUD 300M+ commitment announced

Q2 FY26

U.S. Army SVT RFS and TSS/TMT RFI windows active

Q4 FY26

RVCT and TSS/TMT award windows

Key decision points for CAE's U.S. Army positioning

Key Conclusions

Sovereign training procurement increasingly bundles facilities, simulation, courseware, and digital learning into enterprise packages. Civil demand is shifting toward narrowbody fleets and regional centres. Low-altitude/AAM demand is forming through regulation, licensing, and university ecosystems before market narratives catch up.

U.S. land modernization rewards modular, software-led synthetic ecosystems. Maritime demand is increasingly synthetic, distributed, and coalition-oriented.

Sources & References

  1. 1.
  2. 2.
  3. 3.
  4. 4.
    Bellamy, W. (2024). 'Military Flight Simulation: Trends and Technologies.' Journal of Defense Modeling and Simulation, 21(3), 215–228.
  5. 5.
    Page, E. H. & Smith, R. (2023). 'Advances in Simulation-Based Training for Complex Military Operations.' M&S Magazine, 18(2), 34–47.