By Dr Mohd Nazreen Mohd Nasir (nazreen@might.org.my) and Dr Nurul Hidayah Shabdin (nurulhidayah@might.org.my)
LIMA as a Strategic Mirror
The 17th Langkawi International Maritime and Aerospace Exhibition (LIMA 2025), held from 20-25 May, was more than a global defence and aviation showcase. For Malaysia, it became a strategic mirror, reflecting not only its ambitions in high technology and defence sectors but also its evolving approach to policy, capability development, and global positioning. As international attention zeroed in on new aircraft, unmanned systems and bilateral agreements, a parallel narrative unfolded beneath the surface: one of nation-building, driven by multisectoral alignment and industrial foresight.
The Malaysian Industry-Government Group for High Technology (MIGHT) sent a team to LIMA 2025 to learn from the exhibitors. They identified significant opportunities and challenges that will help guide Malaysia’s future industry plans. This article shares key announcements and ideas about building a strong and innovative industrial sector for Malaysia.
Strategic Signals at LIMA 2025: Launch of Four Strategic Industrial Reports
Business-to-Government Synergies as a Catalyst for Sovereignty One of the most consequential elements of LIMA 2025 was not only what was showcased on the tarmac or at sea – but what was launched in the form of strategic foresight. MIGHT unveiled four landmark industry reports, each signalling a deliberate step forward in Malaysia’s high-tech industrial transformation agenda.

Business-to-Government Synergies as a Catalyst for Sovereignty
Beyond the unveiling of platforms and the signing of strategic Memorandum of Understanding (MoUs), LIMA 2025 also highlighted a critical undercurrent – the strengthening of business-to-government (B2G) collaboration. For many exhibitors, the event served as an active node for fostering public-private partnerships (PPPs), government-supported innovation hubs, talent development initiatives, market access strategies, and sustainability-linked ventures.
PPPs have emerged as a particularly effective tool in this context. The exhibition showcased multiple joint ventures between Malaysian aerospace firms and government agencies aimed at co-developing new capabilities, such as advanced drone surveillance systems. These initiatives are not only symbolic of joint innovation but also demonstrate the state’s role in catalysing national security and industry competitiveness through shared investment in technological capability building.
The presence of dedicated innovation hubs, established through partnerships between government, academia and industry, also added strategic depth to the exhibition. For instance, joint R&D centres focusing on advanced composite materials and propulsion technologies were highlighted as success cases. Such centres, often benefiting from government grants, position Malaysia as a regional hub for aerospace R&D, while allowing local firms to participate meaningfully in global value chains.
The talent component was equally significant. Several exhibitors, in collaboration with foreign OEMs and local universities, presented workforce development programmes focused on highly technical domains like avionics, systems integration and smart diagnostics. These are not merely internships or training programmes, they are nation-building mechanisms that ensure Malaysia’s workforce is future-proofed against rapid industrial transitions.
Additionally, LIMA served as a launchpad for Malaysian defence and aerospace SMEs to access global markets. Government-facilitated trade missions, combined with visibility on the LIMA platform, enable these companies to engage with international buyers, creating opportunities for exports, licensing agreements, and foreign investment inflows.
Sustainability initiatives also took centre stage, further reinforcing Malaysia’s Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) alignment. From maritime firms showcasing eco-friendly ship designs to aerospace players introducing hydrogen-ready infrastructure and circular biofuel models, the exhibition demonstrated how defence and industrial actors are aligning with national climate goals. These efforts demonstrate the potential for robust tripartite partnerships among government, business and society in developing sustainable solutions that yield both environmental and economic benefits.
Five Pillars of Malaysia’s Industrial Growth
Throughout LIMA 2025, a coordinated approach to industrial development became evident, built on five reinforcing pillars:

Field-Based Insights: The Ground Truth of Industrial Ambitions

Strategic Implications for Foresight and Policy Planning
These converging trends offer rich material for Malaysia’s strategic planners. From a foresight perspective, the following opportunities stand out:
- Update national industrial roadmaps to integrate dual-use technologies that span civil and defence applications.
- Translate talent development insights into modular, industry-coordinated upskilling strategies.
- Design policy levers to scale SME participation in defence and high-tech value chains.
- Embed space and satellite strategy into broader security, logistics and data sovereignty planning.
- Reinforce bilateral platforms (e.g., Malaysia-Turkey, Malaysia-South Korea) with implementation timelines, capability metrics, and co-development roadmaps.
From Showcase to Sovereignty
LIMA 2025 was not just a showcase of technologies but a rehearsal for sovereignty. It demonstrated Malaysia’s ability to convene, learn and align across sectors and borders. The fusion of financing tools like AeroPN, education ecosystem reforms, SME enablement strategies, and new bilateral alignments reveals a maturing ecosystem that is learning to think systemically.
If the exhibition floor is where capabilities were displayed, then Malaysia’s next task is to ensure those capabilities are built, scaled and retained domestically. It is only through such deliberate execution that the country can transition from being a buyer to a builder, ultimately becoming a strategic partner in shaping the regional industrial order.
The journey from exhibition to execution has begun. Now comes the real work.
References
- Asia Business Outlook, 2025. Turkiye’s DASAL Aviation Deepens Defense Ties with Malaysia at LIMA 2025. [online] Available at: https://www. asiabusinessoutlook.com/news/turkiye-s-dasal-aviation-deepens-defense-ties-with-malaysia-at-lima-2025-nwid-8829.html [Accessed 28 May 2025].
- Asian Defence Journal, 2025. Nonee Ashirin Mohd Radzi, Chairman, Global Turbine Asia. [online] Available at: https://adj.com.my/2025/05/23/nonee-ashirinmohd- radzi-chairman-global-turbine-asia/ [Accessed 28 May 2025].
- Global Turbine Asia Instagram, 2025. [Forging the Future: GTA’s Strategic Agreements Unveiled at LIMA 2025]. [online] Available at: https://www.instagram. com/p/DJ8TYatTr-v/?img_index=4 [Accessed 28 May 2025].
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