Germany's ARX Robotics said on 6 May it had won an order to expand its GEREON unmanned ground vehicle (UGV) fleet for Ukraine to roughly five times its previous size. 1 A UGV is a robot that drives on land; the GEREON fleet runs logistics, resupply, casualty evacuation (CASEVAC) and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR). Ukraine has said it wants to buy 25,000 ground robots in the first half of 2026. Read that as an industry indicator, not a war report. A buyer consuming robots at that rate sets the production tempo for the whole European sector, ARX included.
The demand signal is for cheap, repairable robots delivered at scale, not a handful of exquisite ones. That favours integrators who can manufacture fast inside the customer's region, and it is reshaping where the robots get built. ARX signed a teaming agreement with Britain's Supacat on 28 April to turn the Jackal patrol vehicle, a high-mobility platform used by the British Army, into an optionally crewed version, putting UGV manufacturing on UK soil. 2 For a UK reader the significance is sovereign capacity: the deal gives British production a demand justification beyond the domestic order book.
Rivals are crowding the same field. Turkey's Havelsan, a state-owned defence systems firm, unveiled its Barkan 3 ground robot on 8 May after trials of an eight-unit swarm, and said it is chasing European customers. 3 The contest is no longer who can field one robot but who can field a coordinated pack of them, with the production line close enough to the front to keep replacing losses.
