The Borneo Post

Europe battles powder shortage to supply shells for Ukraine

- Tom Barfield

PARIS: Hard-to-find gunpowder is hindering Europe’s scramble to provide hundreds of thousands of shells for Ukraine’s defensive effort against Russian invaders, with solutions only starting to emerge.

“We have all become aware of the need to face up to the scarcity of some components, especially gunpowders,” French President Emmanuel Macron said Monday after a gathering of Kyiv’s allies in Paris.

“Powder is really what’s lacking today,” he added. Gunpowder goes into propellant charges that hurl artillery shells – such as the Nato-standard 155-millimetre projectile­s used in many guns sent to Ukraine – over distances of tens of kilometres.

“A simple explosive artillery shell has three parts. It has a steel casing, a high-explosive main charge and a detonator” usually set to trigger the blast on impact, said Johann Hoecherl, a munitions expert at the German armed forces university in Munich.

“Propellant charges are usually separate, because (gunners) will take one or two, up to six or even eight” depending on the desired range, he added.

While the propellant is still referred to as gunpowder “it’s not powder at all these days, it’s made up of rods or pellets”, Hoecherl said.

In a video on its website, German arms manufactur­er Rheinmetal­l illustrate­s stackable propellant cylinders filled with explosive pellets slotting in behind a shell in the breech of a cannon.

Europe counts a very small number of powder producers, said Jean-Paul Maulny, deputy director of France’s Institute for Internatio­nal and Strategic Relations (IRIS). They include firms like Eurenco, with operations in France, Belgium and Sweden, and Nitrochemi­e, majority-owned by Rheinmetal­l, with sites in Germany and Switzerlan­d.

With many countries pushing to bring production home, France ‘is in the process of relocating part of Eurenco’s production to Bourges’ around 200 kilometres (125 miles) south of Paris, Maulny said.

“This is one of the bottleneck­s for munitions,” he added. “The top question is the quantity of production.”

EU internal market commission­er Thierry Breton told reporters in Paris Friday that the bloc also faced challenges finding the raw materials for gunpowder.

“To make powder, you need a specific kind of cotton, which mostly comes from China,” he said.

Nitrocellu­lose, also known as guncotton, is a key ingredient in gunpowder manufactur­e.

“Would you know it, deliveries of this cotton from China stopped as if by chance a few months ago,” Breton added.

China and Russia have in recent years ramped up economic cooperatio­n and diplomatic contacts, and their strategic partnershi­p has grown closer since the invasion of Ukraine.

In Russia this week, China’s Vice Foreign Minister Sun Weidong declared relations ‘are at their best period in history.’

Breton said that “Nordic countries have found a substitute for the Chinese cotton... innovation is at work, precisely to meet the need for powder, because... we have problems today with powder capacity”.

Companies producing the substitute ingredient­s for powder would be among those selected for grants under the EU’s Act In Support of Ammunition Production (ASAP) to be announced next week, Breton said.

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