According to www.scmp.com, drone vendors from Abu Dhabi to Pretoria converged on Kuala Lumpur for the biennial Defence Services Asia (DSA) exhibition in April 2026, responding to rapidly accelerating demand for unmanned aerial vehicles across Southeast Asia’s defence ministries.
Market Momentum Driven by Global Combat Evidence
The source states that real-world battlefield demonstrations — including commercial drones destroying battle tanks in Ukraine and Iranian Shahed drones threatening Tel Aviv — have catalysed urgent regional interest in UAV capabilities. This shift is reflected in vendor activity at DSA 2026, where foreign exhibitors significantly outnumbered previous editions. According to the report, Emirati firm Resource Industries showcased its ‘500H’ high-performance helicopter drone, highlighting technical specialization amid broad market entry.
Vendor Perspectives on Regional Opportunity
Mohammed Ayesh, director of acquisition and development at Resource Industries, emphasized the scale of regional appetite:
“There is huge demand from the market in Asia … very, very big demand,” — Mohammed Ayesh, director of acquisition and development at Resource Industries
He added candidly, “To be honest, too much. It is good, we are very busy.”
Supply Chain Implications for Defence Logistics Professionals
For global supply chain professionals supporting defence logistics, this surge signals intensified requirements for end-to-end UAV supply chain resilience — spanning dual-use component sourcing, export-controlled technology compliance, cross-border certification pathways, and rapid fielding of maintenance and training infrastructure. Unlike traditional platform procurement, UAV systems involve tightly integrated software, battery supply chains, and data transmission protocols, increasing dependencies on semiconductor availability, lithium-ion battery logistics, and secure firmware distribution channels. The source notes that DSA 2026 featured vendors from multiple continents, underscoring the multi-regional nature of this supply ecosystem. As Southeast Asian militaries accelerate UAV adoption, practitioners must anticipate tighter scrutiny on geopolitical risk exposure — particularly concerning dual-use sensor components, AI-enabled targeting modules, and third-country intermediaries in logistics routing.
Source: South China Morning Post
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










