-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
France follows England in measuring hottest spring on record
-
German arms maker Rheinmetall signs 5.7 bn euro deal with Romania
-
Anthropic expands access to powerful Mythos AI model
-
Yael Nardi Joins Minimus As Chief Business Officer to Drive Hyper-Growth
-
STARTRADER Launches 39 New US Stocks and ETFs Across the Sectors Shaping the Future of Global Markets
-
OSL Strengthens Asia’s Digital Asset Ecosystem with Listing of State-Supervised Gold-Backed Stablecoin USDKG
-
Chilli price drives Indonesia's monthly inflation
-
UN warns world to prepare for El Nino extreme weather
-
French astronaut to fly to commercial space station under deal
-
Oil falls, stocks rise as traders bet on Mideast progress
-
Exoplanets can have magnetic fields, 'hot Jupiter' winds reveal
-
Most stocks rise, oil drops as traders assess outlook for Mideast deal
-
Most stocks rise as traders assess outlook for Mideast deal
-
Pay workers 'as much as possible', Nvidia's Huang says
-
French wine growers plant trees to protect vines from climate
-
Fears of hunger overwhelm Guatemalan village as El Nino approaches
-
Asian stocks swing on mixed signals over Middle East
-
Bollywood divided over bid to cap punishing work hours
-
Hanoi curbs kerb culture as city clamps down on pavement vendors
-
As Trump cheerleads for AI, some in MAGA world fret
-
AI unearths football talent beyond scouts' radar
-
Australia says wheat crop set to plunge
-
Florida sues OpenAI, CEO Altman over ChatGPT harm to minors
-
Macron announces 93 bn euros in 'Choose France' foreign investments
-
AI giant Anthropic confidentially files for IPO
-
New York Times publisher slams AI companies' 'brazen theft' from news outlets
-
Word nerds have a weekend on the tiles at Thailand's Scrabble title
-
'We need to act now': Race to develop Ebola vaccine heats up
-
Oil prices jump as Iran suspends peace talks
-
Nvidia PC chip hailed as 'game changer' in race for AI device
-
'Stop killing women': Kenyans protest femicide scourge
-
Survey finds generational gap in attitudes to AI romance
-
Macron announces 93 bn euros in 'Choose France' investments
-
France seizes Russia-linked oil tanker with ties to Iranian magnate
-
Australia economy minister says 'legitimate' fears driving rise of far-right
-
In Finland, radioactive spent nuclear fuel soon to be buried underground
-
Asian equities ahead, oil rises as uncertainty surrounds US-Iran talks
-
'AI simply can't replicate it': Japan embraces zine trend
-
Hollywood honors Marilyn Monroe, 100 years after her birth
-
Outgoing chair Powell delivers defense of Fed independence
-
Graid Technology Launches VROC(TM) by Graid Technology with 24-Month Roadmap and Tier 1 OEM Support
-
Singer Dua Lipa marries actor Callum Turner: media
-
Energy crunch fuels car pool growth
-
Mining turns India's heat-shield hills to dust
-
After the AI binge, companies balk at soaring bills
-
SoftBank to spend $87.5bn on AI centres in France: Son
-
France warns that strong storms could end deadly heatwave
-
Edgar Morin: France's intellectual 'grandfather' dies at 104
-
Hungary to reform public media after long pro-Orban bias
German arms maker Rheinmetall signs 5.7 bn euro deal with Romania
German defence giant Rheinmetall said Tuesday it has signed a 5.7-billion-euro ($6.6-billion) deal to supply the Romanian armed forces, in the company's biggest international contract in recent times.
Air defence systems, almost 300 combat vehicles, naval vessels and ammunition are to be sold to the NATO member on the alliance's eastern flank, Rheinmetall said in a statement.
The news came days after a drone smashed into an apartment building in Romania, which borders war-torn Ukraine, triggering furious condemnation from NATO allies.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said there was no evidence to blame his country.
Rheinmetall CEO Armin Papperger hailed Tuesday's deal as a "significant success".
"Together with our Romanian partners, we will establish a far-reaching defence ecosystem here," he said.
"This also confirms our ambition to further expand our role as one of the industrial pillars of European security."
Deliveries of the new systems are set to begin in 2028 and be completed by 2030, Rheinmetall said.
A significant proportion of the armaments will be produced in Romania, and thousands of jobs are set to be created, the Duesseldorf-based group said.
The deal falls under the European Union's SAFE (Security Action for Europe) lending initiative created to provide EU countries with loans at lower rates to help them rearm.
European countries have been racing to bolster their militaries since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, and Rheinmetall has been a major beneficiary of the rearmament.
A.Mykhailo--CPN