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Amaero has secured a supply contract valued at A$7.8 million for the procurement of titanium powder, a critical feedstock for its additive manufacturing operations.
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Amaero has secured a supply contract valued at A$7.8 million for the procurement of titanium powder, a critical feedstock for its additive manufacturing operations.

Amaero International Ltd
Amaero International Ltd

Materials

Originally reported by proactiveinvestors.com

Amaero has secured a supply contract valued at A$7.8 million for the procurement of titanium powder, a critical feedstock for its additive manufacturing operations. This agreement supports the company's strategic roadmap for FY2027, ensuring a consistent supply chain for its high-performance metal powder requirements. The contract focuses on securing high-quality titanium alloy powders, specifically tailored for laser powder bed fusion and directed energy deposition processes. This move is led by the executive team as they scale production capabilities at their Australian and international facilities to meet increasing demand for aerospace and defense components.

Securing long-term feedstock supply is a strategic necessity for metal AM firms as they transition from prototyping to serial production. By locking in A$7.8 million worth of titanium powder, Amaero mitigates the volatility associated with raw material pricing and availability in the global titanium market. This development positions the company to better manage its cost of goods sold while maintaining the stringent material specifications required for flight-critical parts. It addresses the common industry bottleneck of material quality consistency, which remains a primary barrier to wider adoption in highly regulated sectors like aerospace.

For Amaero, the priority is now the efficient integration of this material into their production workflows to maximize yield and minimize waste. Buyers and stakeholders should evaluate how this supply security translates into improved delivery timelines and reduced unit costs for their end-use components. The company must now demonstrate that this investment in raw materials directly correlates to increased throughput and higher utilization rates of their installed metal AM hardware fleet.

Topics

Amaerotitanium powderadditive manufacturingmetal AMsupply chainaerospace manufacturingAustraliafeedstock

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