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市場調査レポート
商品コード
1756011
航空管制の世界市場:空港規模別、コンポーネントタイプ別、空域タイプ別、用途別、セクタータイプ別、地域別、機会、予測、2018年~2032年Global Air Traffic Control Market Assessment, By Airport Size, By Component Type, By Airspace Type, Application, By Sector Type, By Region, Opportunities and Forecast, 2018-2032F |
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カスタマイズ可能
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航空管制の世界市場:空港規模別、コンポーネントタイプ別、空域タイプ別、用途別、セクタータイプ別、地域別、機会、予測、2018年~2032年 |
出版日: 2025年06月25日
発行: Markets & Data
ページ情報: 英文 225 Pages
納期: 3~5営業日
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世界の航空管制の市場規模は、世界の航空旅行の復活、レガシーシステムの近代化、AIとデジタル通信プロトコルの統合に牽引され、予測期間の2025年~2032年のCAGRは7.13%となり、2024年の124億米ドルから2032F年には215億2,000万米ドルに成長すると予測されています。各国は、特にアジア太平洋や中東などの地域で、旅客と貨物の需要増を支えるため、空港インフラのアップグレードを積極的に進めています。
世界の航空業界がパンデミック(世界的大流行)時代の低迷から回復するにつれ、効率的で安全かつ適応性の高い航空管制(ATC)システムの必要性がかつてないほど高まっています。空域は、商業便の増加だけでなく、ドローン、宇宙往来、軍事運用、グリーン航空技術の参入により、より複雑化しています。このような重層的な環境において、ATC市場は単なる安全促進装置ではなく、次世代モビリティのバックボーンとなっています。
とはいえ、時代遅れのレーダー・インフラ、熟練管制官の不足、サイバーセキュリティの脆弱性、国境を越えたプロトコルの調和の必要性など、課題は山積しています。ATCの利害関係者は、OEMからANSP(航空航法サービス・プロバイダー)に至るまで、シームレスな空域調整を可能にするスケーラブルでモジュール化された、将来対応可能なシステムに投資しています。また、ハードウェアは不可欠であるが、ソフトウェアとサービスレイヤーが急速に中心的な役割を担うようになり、予測分析、リモートタワー、統合監視がより鮮明な運用焦点になりつつあります。これは単に飛行機が衝突しないようにするだけでなく、遅延、レガシー、直線的思考がもはや許容されない、コネクテッド、自律的、持続可能な空域の未来を編成することなのです。
例えば、ATC音声システムの世界的リーダーであるFrequentis AGは、2024年3月、X10 ITベースのVCSプラットフォームを導入し、ルクセンブルクなどの空港に配備され、サイバーセキュリティ、ユーザビリティ、柔軟性を強化しています。
また、2025年5月には、FrequentisがDFS Karlsruheの上空通信をアップグレードし、イノベーションとスケールの両面における足跡を証明しています。
当レポートでは、世界の航空管制市場について調査し、市場の概要とともに、空港規模別、コンポーネントタイプ別、空域タイプ別、用途別、セクタータイプ別、地域別動向、および市場に参入する企業のプロファイルなどを提供しています。
Global air traffic control market is projected to witness a CAGR of 7.13% during the forecast period 2025-2032, growing from USD 12.40 billion in 2024 to USD 21.52 billion in 2032F, driven by the resurgence in global air travel, modernization of legacy systems, and integration of AI and digital communication protocols. Countries are actively upgrading airport infrastructures, especially in regions such as Asia-Pacific and the Middle East, to support growing passenger and cargo demand.
As global aviation recovers from its pandemic-era slump, the need for efficient, secure, and adaptive air traffic control (ATC) systems has never been more urgent. Airspace is becoming more complex, not just with increasing commercial flights, but with drones, space-bound traffic, military operations, and green aviation technologies entering the mix. In this layered environment, the ATC market is not just a safety facilitator but a backbone of next-gen mobility.
Yet the challenges are just as prominent, outdated radar infrastructure, shortage of skilled controllers, cybersecurity vulnerabilities, and the need for cross-border protocol harmonization. ATC stakeholders, from OEMs to ANSPs (Air Navigation Service Providers), are investing in scalable, modular, and future-ready systems that allow for seamless airspace coordination. Also, the hardware is essential, software and service layers are rapidly taking center stage, bringing predictive analytics, remote towers, and integrated surveillance into sharper operational focus. This is not just about keeping planes from colliding, but about orchestrating the future of connected, autonomous, and sustainable airspace, where latency, legacy, and linear thinking are no longer acceptable.
For instance, in March 2024, Frequentis AG, a global leader in ATC voice systems, introduced its X10 IT-based VCS platform in March 2024, being deployed at airports like Luxembourg to strengthen cybersecurity, usability, and flexibility.
In May 2025, Frequentis also upgraded DFS Karlsruhe's upper-airspace comms in May 2025, proving their footprint in both innovation and scale.
Increasing Global Aviation Recovery and Air Traffic Driven Global Air Traffic Control Market Demand
The strongest tailwind for ATC system investments is the undeniable recovery in global aviation activity. With airlines restoring capacity and passenger numbers rebounding to pre-COVID levels, there has been a renewed urgency in strengthening airspace safety and scalability.
According to IATA, 2023 saw a 36% year-on-year growth in global Revenue Passenger Kilometers (RPKs), marking a near-complete recovery. But this surge brought complications. Airports such as London Heathrow and New Delhi IGI reported increased holding patterns due to congestion and controller shortages.
To address these pressures, many governments initiated airspace optimization programs. For instance, in October 2023, the U.S. FAA rolled out a USD 1.4 billion NextGen ATC upgrade package that included automated sequencing tools, better runway utilization software, and ADS-B infrastructure expansion to underserved regions.
Similarly, in September 2023, Dubai Air Navigation Services (DANS) took a major step forward in air traffic management by partnering with Indra, through its subsidiary Indra Avitech, to become one of the first organizations in the region to implement the advanced System Wide Information Management (SWIM) system.
As flight volumes rise, nations recognize that outdated tower-based legacy systems cannot keep up, giving way to smart towers, seamless FIR integration, and faster decision-making platforms.
ATC Digitization, Remote Towers, and AI Integration Lead Market Growth
Beyond physical infrastructure, the biggest transformation in ATC is digital. Ground-based radars and voice commands are giving way to software-defined networks, predictive analytics, and remote tower services, especially for small and medium airports. Remote towers are emerging as a game-changer as they allow centralized management of multiple airports, reduce controller workload, and bring high-resolution visual feeds with AI-based incident detection.
For instance, in May 2024, the Belgian air traffic service provider Skeyes officially opened its Digital Tower Test Centre in Steenokkerzeel, Belgium, utilizing advanced digital air traffic management technology from Saab. This facility serves as a prototype for a forthcoming digital control center, a joint project between Skeyes and Societe Wallonne des Aeroports in Namur, which is expected to become operational in 2026.
Built on Saab's Remote Tower (r-TWR) solution, the test centre enables remote management of air traffic for Charleroi and Liege airports, located approximately 100 kilometers apart. The centre also used to train air traffic controllers and help staff adapt to the new digital technologies, marking a significant step forward in modernizing Belgium's air traffic management infrastructure.
Moreover, ATC software platforms are now adopting machine learning to predict traffic density, turbulence zones, and runway occupancy, offering controllers decision support rather than traditional static sequencing. The wave of digitization is especially useful for Tier-2 airports with budget constraints, enabling them to scale ATC efficiency without full-fledged tower infrastructure. Countries such as Canada, the UK, and Singapore are piloting remote ATC programs for regional nodes, seeing them as cost-effective, high-resilience solutions. As AI, IoT, and edge computing mature, the ATC industry is shifting from a tower-centric model to a cloud-connected, modular ecosystem that can flex across both civil and defense aviation needs.
Dominance of the Commercial Sector in the ATC Market
Among the various sectors using ATC systems, the commercial aviation segment remains the biggest investor and most reliant, accounting for the highest percentage of global ATC-related investments. Airlines demand precision, minimal delays, and flexible routing, especially with cost-sensitive narrow-body fleets and increased use of point-to-point networks. The commercial boom in low-cost carriers (LCCs) in markets such as India, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia adds even more ATC pressure, as they often operate from smaller airports with weaker legacy infrastructure.
In February 2024, IndiGo (India's largest LCC) highlighted in its quarterly earnings call that flight delays due to ATC limitations at Tier-2 airports had increased operating costs by nearly 12%, prompting calls for automation and remote tower adoption at over 20 regional hubs.
Additionally, hub airports such as Singapore Changi and Incheon trialed AI-based aircraft turnaround prediction software to support growing commercial fleets, integrating ATC with apron management and real-time flight analytics.
Military and drone-based traffic are growing, but commercial airlines remain the primary users and pushers of innovation - their dependency on punctuality, route optimization, and safety keeps them at the forefront of ATC evolution.
Asia-Pacific Leading Global ATC Investments
While Europe and North America lead in historical air traffic management, Asia-Pacific is now the most aggressive investor in ATC modernization. China alone accounts for over 240 civilian airports, with plans to build more by 2030. India is expanding its UDAN regional connectivity program, adding new air routes and tier-2 airports every quarter. Southeast Asia, meanwhile, is integrating its FIRs and fast-tracking ASEAN airspace harmonization.
For instance, in May 2024, the Airports Authority of India (AAI) partnered with Frequentis AG to deploy the voice communication control system (VCCS) at six new regional airports under the Greenfield Airport Scheme, boosting interoperability between towers and area control centers. Meanwhile, the Philippines and Vietnam have both finalized contracts with Thales S.A. to bring in TopSky ATC systems, with rollout timelines from 2025 onward.
The APAC region is not just expanding airport infrastructure - it's redefining how ATC is delivered, maintained, and automated, often leapfrogging traditional models in favor of AI-backed systems.
Impact of U.S. Tariffs on the Global Air Traffic Control Market
U.S. tariffs on imported electronic components, especially from China, have raised the cost of radar modules, sensors, and communication systems, inflating procurement budgets for ATC system integrators globally.
OEMs such as Raytheon, Northrop Grumman, and Honeywell have faced disruptions in sourcing critical parts (e.g., microprocessors, circuit boards), prompting a shift to alternative suppliers in Southeast Asia and Eastern Europe, often at higher costs and longer lead times.
The tariff environment has encouraged ATC system vendors to localize production or engage in joint ventures with in-region partners (e.g., Indra in the Middle East, Frequentis in APAC) to bypass tariffs and reduce long-term supply risk.
Key Players Landscape and Outlook
The global air traffic control (ATC) market is characterized by a high degree of consolidation, with a few dominant players accounting for a significant portion of global revenues. Leading players command the space through their long-standing relationships with civil aviation authorities, defense ministries, and airport operators. They are not just hardware providers but full-stack ATC ecosystem enablers - integrating radars, communication systems, surveillance software, and decision-support tools. A key trend shaping competition is the blurring line between civil and military ATC systems. Increasingly, providers are offering modular platforms capable of managing both domains with seamless switching capabilities. This dual-use focus is gaining relevance in regions with contested or shared airspaces. Cybersecurity and software-defined networking have become pivotal differentiators. As the threat landscape around critical infrastructure intensifies, companies are bundling AI-powered anomaly detection, encrypted VCS, and secure datalink modules as part of their ATC offerings. The ability to deliver resilience on both the application and network layer is now essential to win public sector contracts. Moreover, competition is being driven by integration ability, not just standalone product performance. Clients are demanding interoperability with legacy infrastructure, flexible licensing models, and compliance with ICAO and EUROCONTROL mandates. Firms that can bundle automation, AI-assisted decision-making, and predictive maintenance analytics are gaining an edge, especially in high-growth markets such as Asia-Pacific, the Middle East, and Latin America. Finally, vertical integration and strategic acquisitions are intensifying. Players are acquiring specialist firms in radar tech, UTM (unmanned traffic management), and digital tower platforms to build end-to-end airspace solutions, shifting the market from "equipment-based" to "ecosystem-based" competition.
In April 2024, Thales S.A. and L3Harris Technologies, Inc. announced a collaboration to develop software-defined ATC modules that can be deployed across both civilian and defense sectors, aiming to simplify system upgrades and improve dual-use compatibility. The joint solution will combine L3Harris' target-oriented tracking system (TOTS) with Thales' Agile C4I at the Edge system for enhanced command and control.
All segments will be provided for all regions and countries covered
Companies mentioned above DO NOT hold any order as per market share and can be changed as per information available during research work.