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Autonomous Systems: Land & Sea
29MAY

Milrem builds THeMIS outside Estonia for Ukraine

3 min read
08:47UTC

Milrem Robotics and VDL Defentec opened a THeMIS line at Born in the Netherlands on 4 June, handing over the first of 100-plus Dutch-funded ground robots for Ukraine, the first THeMIS production beyond Estonia.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Milrem's first non-Estonian THeMIS line sets a cross-border surge-capacity precedent for European UGV resupply.

Milrem Robotics and its Dutch partner VDL Defentec opened a THeMIS unmanned ground vehicle (UGV) production line at Born, in the Netherlands, on about 4 June 2026, handing over the first of more than 100 units funded by the Dutch government for Ukraine 1. THeMIS, a tracked modular ground robot built by Estonia's Milrem, has operated in Ukraine since 2022. The Born plant is the first THeMIS production outside Milrem's Estonian factory, run through the company's Dutch subsidiary, and it is configured as a flexible final-assembly line built to scale capacity fast.

Ukrainian battlefield demand is pulling this geography, read here strictly as an industry leading indicator rather than a war story. That same appetite earlier pulled a fivefold production expansion from Germany's ARX Robotics ; the Born line now spreads the response across a border for the first time. A single national factory cannot deliver a 100-plus order at wartime pace, so the manufacturing answer is a second line in a second country, and that is the first confirmed cross-border dispersion of a UGV programme.

The precedent reaches past Ukraine. A modular line that can stand up quickly in an allied state is the surge-capacity model NATO ground-robot resupply has not had, and it sharpens a question hanging over the UK's institution-building: a domestic market projection is only sovereign if UK lines can match the continental surge capacity Milrem and VDL have just demonstrated, rather than buying the hardware in.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Milrem Robotics is an Estonian company that makes the THeMIS (Tracked Hybrid Modular Infantry System), a remote-controlled tracked vehicle roughly the size of a large quad bike. THeMIS can carry a machine gun, a stretcher for casualty evacuation, a logistics load, or reconnaissance sensors. It does not carry a person; a soldier controls it from a distance. Ukraine has used THeMIS in combat since 2022. The Dutch government ordered more than 100 units for delivery to Ukraine and, instead of simply buying them from Estonia, worked with Milrem to build a second production facility in Born in the Netherlands. VDL Defentec, a Dutch defence manufacturer, operates the Born site. Moving production into a NATO member's territory with an established defence-industrial base reduces the risk that Milrem's single Tallinn factory becomes a supply chokepoint. The Born opening also demonstrates that European countries can stand up credible autonomous ground vehicle assembly lines in months rather than years.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Ukraine announced its intent to procure 25,000 ground robots in the first half of 2026 . Milrem's Estonian factory was producing roughly 20-30 THeMIS units per year at previous rates; a single-site producer could not satisfy even a fraction of that demand. The Born line is a direct industrial response to a procurement signal whose scale exceeded single-manufacturer capacity.

European competitive pressure accelerated the decision. Germany's ARX Robotics expanded its GEREON UGV fleet fivefold for Ukraine ; Turkey's Havelsan unveiled the Barkan 3 for European markets at the same time. Non-European platforms competing for Dutch and German government contracts created pressure for EU-based manufacturers to demonstrate scaling capacity visibly and quickly.

The Netherlands specifically chose Born in Limburg, a region with legacy automotive-supply-chain skills from the former DAF and VDL truck manufacturing cluster, deliberately lowering the skills-transfer cost of standing up a tracked-vehicle assembly line. Flexible final assembly in an existing precision-manufacturing region is faster than greenfield construction in a new industrial location.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    Born demonstrates that European governments can use procurement contract terms to mandate allied-country final assembly, establishing a template for future UGV orders where industrial resilience, not only unit cost, is a selection criterion.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Risk

    A second production node with no published type-certificate governance framework creates a configuration-management ambiguity that could produce non-identical THeMIS variants in Dutch and Estonian production batches, complicating logistics and spare-parts interoperability for Ukraine.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Opportunity

    Other small NATO members with single-source defence-industrial capabilities, including Lithuanian laser-designator producers and Finnish explosive-ordnance-disposal robotics firms, may follow the Milrem/VDL model and seek Netherlands, Germany, or Poland-based assembly partners to scale for Ukraine demand.

    Medium term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #2 · Britain writes the rules; AUKUS names US robots

Soldier Systems Daily· 6 Jun 2026
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