UAE Orders 20 C-390s: Embraer’s Biggest Military Deal

by | May 5, 2026 | Military Aviation, News | 0 comments

Embraer just landed its biggest military deal ever — and it came from a country nobody expected. The United Arab Emirates signed a contract on 4 May for up to 20 C-390 Millennium airlifters, marking the Brazilian aircraft’s first sale in the Middle East and the largest single order in the programme’s history. The deal, signed through the UAE’s Tawazun Council for Defence Enablement, includes 10 firm aircraft with options for 10 more. If Abu Dhabi exercises the full option, it will operate a larger C-390 fleet than Brazil itself — the country that designed and built the aircraft.

Quick Facts

  • Buyer: United Arab Emirates Air Force
  • Aircraft: Embraer C-390 Millennium
  • Order: 10 firm + 10 options (up to 20 total)
  • Signed: 4 May 2026
  • Significance: Largest single C-390 order; first Middle East sale
  • Total C-390 customers: 12 nations
  • Brazil’s fleet: 19 on order (UAE could surpass this)

Un Concurrent Inattendu

The C-390 Millennium occupies a fascinating niche in the military transport market. It’s larger and faster than the C-130J Super Hercules — the world’s most popular tactical airlifter — yet significantly cheaper to operate than strategic transports like the C-17 Globemaster. Two IAE V2500 turbofan engines (the same family that powers the Airbus A320) give it jet speed with turboprop-like efficiency. For the UAE, the C-390 fills a specific gap. Abu Dhabi already operates C-17s for heavy strategic lift and older C-130s for tactical missions. The C-390 sits between them — fast enough for rapid deployment, versatile enough for humanitarian missions, and modern enough to serve for decades without the maintenance burden of aging Hercules airframes.

Embraer’s Defence Breakout

This deal represents a strategic turning point for Embraer’s defence division. The company has long been a commercial aviation powerhouse — its E-Jet family dominates the regional airline market. But in defence, Embraer has struggled to compete against American and European giants. The C-390 changes that calculus. Bosco da Costa Junior, Embraer’s defence chief, told Reuters the UAE deal positions the company for further sales to Abu Dhabi’s allies across the Gulf Cooperation Council. Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, and Oman all operate mixed transport fleets that could benefit from the C-390’s capabilities. The Middle East breakthrough opens a market that has historically purchased almost exclusively from American and European manufacturers.

Les Missions

The UAE Air Force has identified specific missions for its future C-390 fleet: cargo and troop transport, airdrop logistics, and medical evacuation. These are exactly the missions that have defined the UAE’s military posture in recent years — rapid deployment to conflict zones (Yemen, Libya, the Horn of Africa) and humanitarian response across the region. The C-390’s ability to operate from short, unprepared runways while carrying 26 tonnes of cargo at 470 knots makes it particularly suited to the Gulf’s operational reality: vast distances, austere forward operating locations, and a requirement for speed that turboprops cannot match.

Twelve Nations and Counting

With the UAE signing on, the C-390 now has twelve customer nations — a remarkable achievement for an aircraft that entered service only in 2019. The growing operator base includes Brazil, Portugal, Hungary, the Netherlands, Austria, South Korea, the Czech Republic, and Sweden, among others. Each new customer strengthens the programme’s economics and makes the aircraft more attractive to future buyers. For Embraer, the message is clear: Brazil doesn’t just build regional jets anymore. It builds world-class military aircraft — and the world is buying.

Sources: FlightGlobal, Aviation Week, Breaking Defense, Reuters, Zawya

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