Export Growth Is Not the Same as Deployment — Korea’s drone industry is expanding beyond its domestic base. Export data shows clear momentum, but recent developments across Southeast Asia (ASEAN) suggest that entering new markets involves more than shipping hardware.
Airbility’s activities in Thailand, Vietnam, and the Philippines point to a different approach. Instead of treating ASEAN as a single expansion target, the company appears to be building operational layers across multiple countries.
Korea’s Drone Exports Are Rising, but Deployment Remains Uneven
South Korea’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport reported that drone exports reached KRW 36.8 billion in 2025, marking a 58% increase year-on-year, with exports spanning 30 countries. Airframes accounted for 84% of total exports, and the industry recorded 59 memoranda of understanding and 20 overseas proof-of-concept projects during the year.
These figures reflect growing international activity and engagement around Korean UAV technology. At the same time, many of these initiatives are still progressing through early-stage development, pilot programs, or partnership structures rather than full operational deployment.
This context becomes increasingly relevant as Korean startups expand into Southeast Asia, where regulatory frameworks, institutional processes, and operational conditions vary across countries.

Airbility’s ASEAN Moves Suggest a Multi-Layer Expansion Model
Airbility’s recent partnerships across Southeast Asia offer a case study of how Korean UAV startups are adapting their approach.
As the discussion continues, Airbility’s Co-Founder and CPO Jaehyun Lee explained that each partnership serves a specific role:
“Each of our ASEAN partnerships serves a distinct strategic purpose. In Thailand, the focus is on integrating UAV operations with national telecom infrastructure and AI surveillance for public safety. In Vietnam, the partnership centers on manufacturing and commercial distribution. The Philippines program adds a third pillar — human capital development.”
Supported by KILSA Global as regional coordination and execution partner, Airbility’s expansion is being structured around complementary functions rather than replicated market entry strategies.
Thailand: Infrastructure and Public-Sector Access Define the Entry Point
Airbility’s Thailand partnership involves NT iBuzz alongside AI and coordination partners.
The collaboration focuses on integrating UAV operations with telecom infrastructure and public-sector systems, including secure communication networks and AI-based monitoring.
Thailand’s regulatory environment reinforces the importance of this approach. The Civil Aviation Authority of Thailand requires operators to obtain permissions for advanced operations, including flights above 90 meters, night operations, and activity in restricted areas.
An ICAO assessment of Thailand’s UAV framework further highlights structural challenges, including limited safety data, evolving technical standards, and gaps in operator training and traffic management systems.
These conditions mean that UAV deployment depends not only on aircraft capability but also on access to infrastructure and institutional pathways.
Vietnam: Manufacturing and Distribution Become Part of the Strategy
In Vietnam, Airbility has taken a different approach through its partnership with CT Group.
According to publicly reported details, the agreement includes plans for local OEM production of UAV platforms, including Airbility’s systems, with an initial target of 5,000 units. The partnership also covers distribution, sales, customer support, and maintenance.
Vietnam’s government media described the agreement as part of a broader effort to develop local UAV manufacturing capacity, noting that CT UAV has experience producing heavy-duty cargo drones with payload capacities ranging from 60 kg to 300 kg, with localization levels reaching 85%.
This positions Vietnam not only as a market but as a production and distribution base within the region.
The Philippines: Workforce Development as an Operational Layer
Airbility’s agreement with the Danao City Government introduces a third component: workforce development.
The program begins with a six-month trainer certification phase, followed by a twelve-month stage focused on technology delivery and field application, according to both company disclosures and local government confirmation.
The Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines requires certification for commercial drone operators and for drones above 7 kilograms, with requirements that include training, flight experience, and both written and practical assessments. As of October 2025, CAAP reported 1,432 active certified operators nationwide.
This regulatory structure highlights the need for trained personnel as part of UAV deployment.
What This Means for Korean UAV Startups Expanding into Southeast Asia
Airbility’s activities point to a broader shift in how Korean UAV startups approach ASEAN expansion.
Rather than entering individual markets with a single model, the company is structuring its presence across different countries based on local strengths and constraints.
Thailand provides infrastructure and public-sector access. Vietnam contributes manufacturing and distribution capacity. The Philippines supports workforce development.
This approach reflects the diverse regulatory and operational landscape across Southeast Asia, where each market presents different requirements for enabling UAV deployment at scale.

A System Approach Taking Shape Across ASEAN
For now, these partnerships are currently structured at the memorandum-of-understanding stage, with implementation expected to progress in phases depending on local conditions and stakeholder coordination.
Early activities are focused on areas such as demonstration, capability-building, and operational preparation. Production plans, training programs, and integration efforts are also being developed in alignment with each market’s requirements.
But at this stage, the structure itself offers a useful perspective on how Korean UAV startups are approaching regional expansion.
Rather than applying a single model across markets, companies appear to be aligning different components of deployment with the specific strengths and conditions of each location.
ASEAN Expansion Is Becoming a System Problem
Airbility’s ASEAN strategy highlights a broader reality for the global startup ecosystem.
Expanding into Southeast Asia is not only about entering new markets. It involves aligning with infrastructure, building local production capacity, and developing a workforce that can operate within regulatory frameworks.
For Korean UAV startups, this means that international growth is no longer defined solely by export performance.
It is increasingly shaped by how effectively companies can integrate into local systems that vary widely across the region.
Key Takeaway
- Korean UAV startups ASEAN expansion is shifting beyond hardware exports toward system-level execution
- Airbility ASEAN strategy shows three distinct layers: infrastructure (Thailand), manufacturing (Vietnam), workforce (Philippines)
- Korean drone exports Southeast Asia reached KRW 36.8B in 2025 (+58%), but exports do not equal deployment
- Thailand UAV public safety environment requires regulatory approval, telecom integration, and institutional access
- UAV manufacturing Vietnam includes planned OEM production of 5,000 units with local distribution and support
- Drone pilot training Philippines reflects regulatory need for certified operators, with 1,432 active licenses reported in 2025
- KILSA Global ASEAN market entry appears as a recurring coordination layer across multiple partnerships
- UAV deployment Southeast Asia depends on aligning infrastructure, production, and workforce, not just technology availability
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