EU's Plan to Stop and Build Drones
Published January 22, 2026
Goal: EU Drone Defense Independence
The European Parliament passed a resolution to quickly upgrade the EU’s drone defence, boosting local production, supply‑chain security, counter‑drone tech, training, and cooperation with partners to keep up with rising drone threats.
EU Drone‑Warfare Strategy – 22 January 2026
The European Parliament adopted a resolution calling for a rapid overhaul of the EU’s defence posture to meet the new reality of drone‑based warfare. Key points are:
-
Why drones matter
- Drones are now the most lethal weapon in the Ukraine war, causing more casualties than any other weapon.
- They are used for reconnaissance, target‑finding, precision strikes, medical evacuation, electronic warfare, mine‑detection, and even for documenting war crimes.
- Drone use is spreading to Gaza, Israel, Lebanon, Iran, Yemen, Sudan, Myanmar, Azerbaijan, and attacks on ships in the Red Sea.
-
Current EU weaknesses
- 60 % of drone parts come from the United States and China.
- China supplies most semiconductors, batteries, magnets, and navigation chips.
- The EU’s supply chain is vulnerable to Chinese export controls and Russian‑China cooperation.
- 4.5 million drones are produced in Ukraine each year, far outpacing EU production.
-
Funding and investment
- €98 million was spent on the Eurodrone programme in 2020; €100 million in 2024.
- A €7.1 billion contract in February 2022 will build 60 large‑air‑range drones (MALE RPAS).
- The European Defence Fund (EDF) and the European Defence Industry Programme (EDIP) will finance research, manufacturing hubs, and rapid procurement.
- The SAFE (Security Action for Europe) and ReArm Europe plans will support Ukraine’s drone industry and EU‑Ukraine cooperation.
-
Industrial strategy
- Create regional drone‑manufacturing hubs and support SMEs with fast‑track funding, simplified certification, and shared infrastructure.
- Encourage joint ventures between EU prime contractors and Ukrainian or other partner firms.
- Build a “drone wall” – a layered defence that combines radar, acoustic, RF, optical, infrared, and laser hard‑kill systems.
- Develop open‑architecture standards so components can be swapped between suppliers and platforms.
-
Supply‑chain resilience
- Reduce dependence on Chinese rare‑earths, lithium, and semiconductors by developing EU‑based production and recycling.
- Stockpile critical parts (motors, batteries, chips) and create a “component bank” for rapid replacement.
- Use the European Chips Act to fund EU semiconductor manufacturing for drones.
-
Counter‑drone (C‑UAS) capabilities
- Deploy low‑cost, mobile C‑UAS units that can be fielded quickly.
- Integrate electronic‑warfare (EW) jammers, laser‑based interceptors, and AI‑driven threat detection.
- Train all armed forces, police, and civil‑defence units in drone recognition and interdiction.
-
Training and doctrine
- Establish a European Drone Academy and joint training centres in front‑line states.
- Run regular multinational exercises with Ukraine, NATO, and EU partners to test swarm defence, EW resilience, and rapid deployment.
- Align EU C‑UAS rules of engagement with NATO standards and international humanitarian law.
-
EU‑NATO cooperation
- Create a joint EU‑NATO Drone Centre of Excellence in a front‑line state.
- Share lessons from Ukraine, standardise C‑UAS protocols, and coordinate real‑time data sharing.
- Use the EU Sky Shield initiative to integrate C‑UAS into the broader Integrated Air and Missile Defence (IAMD) system.
-
Regulation and policy
- Harmonise EU drone rules with the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) and NATO STANAGs.
- Introduce a “Drone Sovereignty Index” to track EU‑origin components and reduce non‑EU dependencies.
- Ensure all drone systems meet the European Military Airworthiness Requirements (EMAR) and are interoperable with EU and NATO command‑and‑control (C‑C) networks.
-
Strategic partnerships
- Deepen ties with Ukraine, the United Kingdom, Norway, Japan, South Korea, and the United States for technology transfer, joint production, and shared supply chains.
- Engage the International Drone Coalition to accelerate procurement and standardisation.
- Use frozen Russian assets to fund Ukrainian drone development and EU‑Ukraine joint projects.
-
Future outlook
- The EU aims to become fully autonomous in drone production and counter‑drone defence by 2030.
- Continuous innovation, rapid fielding, and a resilient supply chain are essential to keep pace with Russia’s and China’s fast‑moving drone capabilities.
- The resolution urges the European Council, the Council, the Commission, NATO, and partner countries to act swiftly to implement these measures and protect EU security and critical infrastructure.
Licensing: The summaries on this page are available under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0).
The source