Denmark increases multi-year contract for Leopard 2 tank tracks
- Denmark is boosting its Leopard 2 track contract value, awarded directly to KNDS
- FMI cites increased track demand and says only KNDS can supply them
- Move fits wider Danish defence spending rises amid heightened security pressures
The Danish Ministry of Defence’s Materiel and Procurement Agency (FMI) has moved to increase the value of an ongoing 15-year framework agreement for the supply of tracks for its Leopard 2 tanks, first awarded in 2020.
According to a 20 March contract awarded notice, the FMI will increase the original framework agreement value by between DKK 355m-750m ($51.7m-115.9m) in a direct award to original equipment manufacturer KNDS Deutschland Tracks (formerly KMW).
Citing reasoning, the FMI said it had to increase the value of the original agreement “due to a greater need for the procurement of tracks for Leopard 2 family vehicles”.
In justifying the single-source award, the MFI stated the contract and the target value increase can be concluded and implemented without publication of a prior contract negotiation notice as it is “not possible to procure the tracks from anyone other than KNDS Deutschland Tracks”.
While a small country, Denmark maintains a capable military across the land, sea, and air domains. The Royal Danish Army operates a fleet of newly-modernised 44 Leopard 2A7 main battle tanks, having initially taken delivery of Leopard 2A5s in the late-1990s from German defence prime Rheinmetall.
Denmark had previously been part of a bilateral donation of 14 Leopard 2A4 tanks to Ukraine, announced in 2023.
Denmark: small but capable
By the end of 2023 and following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the European security paradigm had been upended and replaced with a growing realisation of the return of Great Power politics, a situation exacerbated with the returning US President Donald Trump.
Forecasts from GlobalData at the time said that security pressures would see Denmark’s defence budget rise from $5.1bn in 2023 to $6.3bn by 2028. Since this forecast, President Trump’s overtures to the acquisition of Greenland, a Danish overseas territory, forced additional defence spending from Copenhagen.

