Airod Sdn Bhd has signed a memorandum of understanding with Airbus Defence and Space to strengthen maintenance, repair and overhaul capabilities for the Royal Malaysian Air Force’s fleet of four Airbus A400M Atlas military transport aircraft. The agreement, inked at the Defence Services Asia 2026 exhibition at the Malaysia International Trade and Exhibition Centre, was witnessed by Defence Minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin.
The MoU was signed by Datuk Edron Hayata bin Ahmad, Group President of National Aerospace and Defence Industries Sdn Bhd (NADI), Airod’s parent company, and Zakir Hamid, Head of Asia Pacific at Airbus Defence and Space. The partnership positions Airod as a qualified local industrial partner and an Airbus approved supplier for long term A400M fleet sustainment.
A fleet that punches above its weight
The four aircraft, registered M54-01 through M54-04, are operated by No. 8 Squadron at Subang Air Base. The squadron took over the A400M role in February 2022 following an internal RMAF restructuring that replaced the original No. 22 Squadron. Malaysia was the first export customer for the A400M outside its European launch nations, signing a 3.5 billion ringgit contract in December 2005 for the four airframes plus training and integrated logistics support. All four were delivered by 2017. With over 13,000 flight hours logged by 2025, the RMAF is the most active A400M operator in the world.
That operational record is not incidental. The A400M’s Europrop TP400-D6 turboprops and its 37 tonne payload capacity have made the aircraft central to Malaysian humanitarian and strategic airlift missions, from the 2018 Palu earthquake response and the 2023 Turkey Syria earthquake relief to pandemic era medical logistics and Operation Pyramid evacuating Malaysians from Egypt. The aircraft can also drop up to 116 paratroopers, operate from unpaved strips, and perform air to air refuelling using underwing pods.
For an aircraft of this strategic weight, MRO arrangements are not a back office detail. They determine how many airframes can be generated on any given day and how much foreign exchange flows out of the country for overseas depot level work.
What the Airod partnership changes
Until now, heavier maintenance and upgrade work on Malaysian A400Ms has involved ferry flights to Airbus facilities in Seville, Spain. The retrofit programme currently running through the fleet, expected to be completed by 2027 according to RMAF leadership, has repeatedly sent aircraft on long transit legs to the Airbus Final Assembly Line. Under the new MoU, Airbus Defence and Space as the original equipment manufacturer will transfer technical knowledge to Airod through a structured capability development pathway.
The scope of the partnership is substantial. Both parties will explore A400M technical training programmes, out of scheme structural repairs, and the expansion of specialised MRO services including Non-Destructive Testing at Level 3. The collaboration also covers aircraft painting activities, with Airod working alongside Satys Aerospace, a Tier 1 Airbus partner with extensive experience at Airbus assembly plants for both civil and military programmes. The Satys element introduces advanced painting technologies and materials to Subang, bringing a high-value capability onshore that previously required ferry flights abroad.
Airod has a long track record in Malaysian military aviation MRO. Adding A400M sustainment to its portfolio gives it a foothold in heavy airlifter work that few regional providers can match. It also builds on an existing industrial relationship, given that Composites Technology Research Malaysia, or CTRM, manufactures composite components for the A400M programme.
Part of a broader Airbus push
The Airod signing is one of four Malaysian partnerships Airbus has lined up around DSA and National Security Asia 2026. Airbus country representative for Malaysia Burhanudin Noordin Ali confirmed agreements with Boustead Holdings Berhad for military satellite communications, Airod for A400M MRO, Global Turbine Asia for engine MRO, and Ikramatic Systems for H225 helicopter simulator capabilities.
Airbus and Malaysia have been strategic partners for over 40 years. The company currently has more than 80 civil, parapublic, and military helicopters in Malaysian service, four A400M heavy lift aircraft, and two communications satellites. Airbus’s annual procurement from Malaysia exceeds 1.5 billion ringgit and supports around 5,000 local jobs.
A regional hub question
For Airod, the strategic prize extends beyond domestic work. Indonesia received the first of two ordered A400Ms in late 2025, ending Malaysia’s long run as the sole Asia Pacific operator of the type. Airbus has also flagged options to expand the RMAF A400M fleet, and is pitching additional platforms to Kuala Lumpur including the A330 Multi Role Tanker Transport and the C295 Maritime Surveillance Aircraft. If Airod can execute on the technical standards required under this MoU, the company is well positioned to pitch itself as a regional A400M MRO option once Indonesian airframes begin their first heavy maintenance cycles.
A quiet but significant marker
For the aircraft sector, the Airod Airbus MoU is the kind of announcement overshadowed at defence exhibitions by missile launches and fighter concept art, but whose operational weight is far greater. It keeps a frontline Malaysian airlift capability healthier for longer, moves high value technical work onto Malaysian soil, and gives a domestic MRO champion a credible platform as the A400M footprint in Asia expands.
For No. 8 Squadron, the practical question is how quickly the first tranche of work transitions from Seville to Subang. For Airod, the challenge is execution. For Malaysia’s broader ambition of becoming a regional defence aviation services hub, this is one of the more substantive steps taken in recent memory.



