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ALL texts adopted by EU parliament, and ALL proposals from EU commission starting 2026
ALL texts adopted by EU parliament, and ALL proposals from EU commission starting 2026
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:
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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).
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