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[The Public—Reporter Hong Chanyoung] Hyundai Rotem is pressing its influence in the global ground-weapons market with the K2 Black Panther main battle tank while accelerating development of unmanned and AI-enabled battlefield technologies.
The company has moved beyond a tank-centric business model, expanding into unmanned ground vehicles, military robots and AI command-and-control systems to strengthen its ability to meet future battlefield requirements.
On the 15th, defense industry sources said Hyundai Rotem is pursuing additional overseas orders for the K2 off the back of its recent export success in Poland. The Russia‑Ukraine war has prompted a wave of rearmament across Europe, increasing demand for tank replacements and new procurements.
The K2 Black Panther is South Korea’s main battle tank, equipped with a 120mm smoothbore gun, an autoloader and a hydropneumatic suspension (ISU). Hyundai Rotem emphasizes the platform’s mobility, competitive pricing and rapid production capability as key selling points abroad.
In 2022 Hyundai Rotem signed a basic contract with Poland for 1,000 K2 tanks and has since advanced first- and second-phase implementation contracts. Industry observers say the export footprint could later expand to Romania, the Middle East and Latin America.
Expectations for vertical integration in the defense sector have risen after Hyundai Motor Group moved to transfer Hyundai Wia’s special-business division to Hyundai Rotem. Analysts say consolidating main-gun and barrel production around Hyundai Rotem could improve production efficiency and cost competitiveness.
Hyundai Rotem is also stepping up preparations for future battlefield systems, centering its unmanned-platform effort on the multipurpose unmanned vehicle HR‑Sherpa.
Designed for surveillance and reconnaissance, cargo transport, casualty evacuation and fire-support missions, the HR‑Sherpa has recently been developed to support remote and autonomous driving as well as manned-unmanned teaming (MUM-T) operations.
The company has expanded its military-robot portfolio as well. Last year Hyundai Rotem became the first domestic firm to deliver a multi‑legged counterterrorism robot to the army. The platform provides day‑and‑night surveillance and reconnaissance, obstacle-negotiation capability and can carry a variety of mission payloads, including remote-firing systems.
Recently Hyundai Rotem partnered with U.S. defense AI firm Anduril to build an AI-based command-and-control system. The company plans to integrate Anduril’s AI operating system, Lattice, into unmanned vehicles and multi‑legged robots to strengthen MUM-T battlefield capabilities.
“The global defense market is rapidly shifting beyond standalone weapon systems toward AI and unmanned platforms,” a defense industry official said. “Hyundai Rotem appears to be expanding from a K2-centered business into a future battlefield platform company.”











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