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Boeing orders will increase US Commerce-aided contracts to $244 billion by 2025.

U.S. firms signed contracts with foreign governments worth $244 billion in 2025, almost triple what they did in 2024, as Boeing saw a huge increase in orders for jetliners, according to the International Trade Administration of the U.S. Commerce Department.

ITA stated that the 121 contracts will also be aided by the foreign spending?commitments?"in recent trade agreements negotiated by Trump administration. The contracts contain approximately $206 billion of U.S. Export Content and will support around 844,000 American Jobs.

In 2024, in the final year of the Biden Administration, ITA signed $87 billion worth of contracts, a significant increase from the COVID era low of only $17 billion that was reached in 2021.

BOEING ORDER SURGE 2025's jump is due to a huge increase in Boeing net orders, which jumped from 377 in the year 2024 to 1,075 in the last year. Boeing's 2025 order volume was its sixth best ever, and it surpassed Airbus for the first time in seven-years. The U.S. Export Champion recovered from years full of production and safety challenges. According to the Trump administration's estimates, Boeing planes and GE Aerospace engines accounted for $215 billion out of a total ITA-assisted contract value of $205 billion, including $187 billion from exports. Commerce valued the widebody jetliner contract with Qatar Airways at $96 billion including engines. Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg and Qatar's Emir Tamim Bin Hamad Al Thani signed the contract during Trump's May visit to Doha. Trump has boasted about being the "greatest Boeing salesman ever."

"Commerce's Support to Boeing was a Differentiator in Our Achievement of Record Deals in 2025," Ortberg said in a?statement, adding that?teams from the agency provided "timely advocacy" and "insightful recommendations that advanced U.S. Jobs and Manufacturing." Commerce's aircraft total includes a $50 billion deal with Korean Air Lines, which was part of an investment and trade deal between the United States and Asian exporter. The deal also included $350 billion worth of other investments.

Estimates of the value of announced aircraft orders often are based on the list price. However, the final sale prices can vary greatly depending on a variety factors such as customer loyalty and size, timing for delivery, long-term agreements on maintenance, order volume, and terms for escalating materials costs.

Planemakers receive most of their money when a jet is actually delivered. Boeing won't see much of this money until 2029, several years after Trump ends his term.

Focus on US interests

An ITA spokesperson said that the Commerce Department totals include only signed contracts. Therefore, a number preliminary Boeing purchase commitments made?last year in trade negotiations by Malaysia, Bangladesh, and other countries would be included in the 2026 totals if they are finalized.

Howard Lutnick, Commerce Secretary, said in a press release that "we are laser-focused" on promoting manufacturing, investment and new opportunities for American workers and companies. "While 2025 marked a historic moment, it was only the beginning. We will continue to usher a "new era" of American manufacturing, and prosperity. The ITA Advocacy Center provides advice to companies about bidding on foreign government contracts and arranges meetings between high-ranking U.S. official and foreign decision makers in order to promote American companies, marshaling the resources of various U.S. agencies.

WABTEC MADE ITS LARGEST OUTSIDE SALE U.S. railroad manufacturer Wabtec signed a $4.2 Billion contract in September to supply 300 heavy haul locomotive kits?to Kazakhstan after an advocacy campaign which included a telephone call between Trump, and Kazakh president Kassym Jomart Tokayev.

ITA reported that the Wabtec deal was its largest ever foreign sale and was part of $8.3 billion worth of global infrastructure and supply-chain projects that U.S. firms will win by 2025. The agency stated that the $244-billion total includes $10 billion worth of contracts in the defense sector, $7 billion worth in contracts in the energy sector, and $3.4 billion dollars in contracts in technology sectors, such as AI, cybersecurity and fintech.

(source: Reuters)