- Saab UK completed its 100th Giraffe 1X radar and opened a new Integration and Verification testing facility at its Fareham site, the company announced.
- The Fareham facility supports Giraffe 1X, Giraffe AMB, and TAIPAN radar production, serving as Saab's UK centre of excellence for radar engineering.
Saab UK has completed its 100th Giraffe 1X radar at its Fareham facility and opened a new Integration and Verification testing facility at the same site, the company announced.
The Fareham site in Hampshire serves as Saab’s UK centre of excellence for radar engineering, supporting production of the Giraffe 1X alongside the Giraffe AMB and TAIPAN, also known as the Arthur weapon-locating radar, according to Saab UK’s announcement. The new Integration and Verification testing facility expands the site’s capacity to test and validate radar systems before delivery, keeping a greater portion of the production and quality assurance process within the UK rather than requiring systems to travel to other Saab facilities for testing.
The Giraffe 1X is a lightweight, mobile 3D air surveillance radar designed for short to medium range detection of targets including fixed-wing aircraft, helicopters, and unmanned aerial systems. Its compact design allows it to be transported and deployed rapidly, making it particularly suited for force protection of military installations, critical infrastructure, and deployable formations that need organic air surveillance capability without the logistical footprint of larger radar systems. The 1X designation reflects its position within the broader Giraffe radar family, which Saab has developed across multiple variants to cover different range requirements and mission profiles.
Reaching the 100th unit at Fareham is a production milestone that goes beyond symbolic value. A radar design that has been manufactured in sufficient volume to accumulate that production count has cleared the early industrial learning curve, built stable supply chains, trained a workforce with repeatable manufacturing skills, and generated the kind of production data that drives continued improvement in cost, quality, and delivery times. For the UK, having that manufacturing depth at a domestic facility rather than relying entirely on imported systems has direct implications for industrial resilience and sovereign capability — the ability to produce, repair, and sustain critical defense electronics without depending on foreign supply chains that can be disrupted by export licensing, geopolitical events, or simply the competing demands of a foreign manufacturer’s other customers.
The addition of the Giraffe AMB and TAIPAN to Fareham’s production and support portfolio broadens the site’s strategic significance. The Giraffe AMB is a medium-range 3D air defence radar capable of tracking a wide range of aerial threats at greater distances than the 1X, providing the surveillance layer that feeds targeting data to longer-range air defence systems. TAIPAN, derived from the Swedish Arthur system, is a weapon-locating radar that detects and tracks the trajectories of incoming artillery, mortar, and rocket fire to calculate the firing position, enabling counter-battery engagements. Having all three systems supported from the same Fareham facility creates engineering and logistics synergies that benefit the UK customers operating them, and concentrates specialist radar expertise in one place rather than dispersing it across multiple sites.
NATO members have been accelerating procurement of ground-based air defence and surveillance radars since 2022, driven by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the resulting reassessment of the threat environments European militaries need to prepare for.
Ukraine’s war has demonstrated the critical importance of early warning radar for air defence against drones, cruise missiles, and conventional air attack, and has validated the utility of weapon-locating radars like Arthur for counter-battery fire in high-intensity artillery-heavy conflict. That operational evidence has accelerated procurement decisions that were previously moving through peacetime timelines, and production capacity at facilities like Fareham has become a constraint that manufacturers across the NATO defense industrial base have been working to expand.

