Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Autonomous Systems: Land & Sea
3JUL

ARX builds British Army robot line

3 min read
10:14UTC

ARX Robotics is investing £45m in a UK GEREON production line for the British Army, the same robot now serving combat in Ukraine and touring Eurosatory in one quarter.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Procurement volume is turning foreign UGV makers into domestic British manufacturers within a single quarter.

ARX Robotics is building a UK production line for its GEREON uncrewed ground vehicle (UGV, a crewless land robot) for the British Army, under a contract awarded in April through the Army's fast-procurement route, Task Force RAPSTONE. The German firm is investing £45m for capacity of up to 1,800 units a year, with British vehicle builder Supacat as manufacturing partner 12.

That contract is two months old and was not reported here, so the line itself is not breaking news. The pattern around it has shifted since April. The same GEREON platform now occupies three market tiers at once: UK domestic procurement for intelligence and reconnaissance, combat deployment in Ukraine under an order that expanded the fleet fivefold , and exhibition marketing through a Daimler Truck tie-up before Eurosatory. One robot spanning prototype-to-volume across three buyers in a single quarter is the clearest sign yet that the European UGV market has left the trial phase.

Procurement volume drives that convergence. Milrem and VDL showed in early June that a European maker can stand up a second cross-border line in months when orders are large enough, handing over the first Dutch-funded vehicles for Ukraine at Born . ARX is repeating the template on British soil, and in-country final assembly is hardening into a contract condition rather than a courtesy.

For the operator, more suppliers and more lines mean shorter lead times and second-source options. For the incumbent British prime, a German SME with a UK factory and a British partner now competes as a domestic player rather than a foreign one. The honest reading is catch-up: Britain is hosting the volume manufacturing of a platform designed and proven elsewhere.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A UGV, or uncrewed ground vehicle, is a land-based robot, essentially a wheeled or tracked platform that can carry equipment, supplies, or sensors without a driver on board. GEREON is one made by a German company called ARX Robotics. The British Army awarded ARX a contract in April 2026 to start making GEREON in the UK, with a factory investment of £45m and a Devon company called Supacat as the production partner. The line can make up to 1,800 units a year. GEREON is already being used in Ukraine, where it carries supplies and equipment to soldiers in combat zones. The Ukraine deployment has grown to roughly five times its original size, which gave ARX the production volume to make a UK factory commercially viable. What makes this unusual is that the same German-designed vehicle is being bought by the British Army, deployed in Ukraine, and shown at a Paris defence exhibition via a partnership with Daimler Truck, all at the same time. Three years ago, GEREON existed only as a development prototype. In April 2026 it received a British Army production contract, a fivefold Ukraine order, and a Eurosatory show slot within a single six-week window.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    ARX Robotics UK with 90 jobs and 1,800-unit annual capacity becomes a domestic UK UGV manufacturer, competing directly with British primes for future Army robotics contracts without requiring a separate UK company to hold the prime contract.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    GEREON's Ukraine-optimised configuration, designed for logistics and casualty evacuation in a high-attrition environment, may require significant C2 integration work before it meets British Army communications and interoperability standards for ISR roles in a NATO collective-defence context.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Precedent

    Task Force RAPSTONE's award to a German SME via in-country assembly establishes that British Army fast-procurement routes are open to European allied firms and not restricted to UK primes, which may accelerate European defence-industrial integration outside formal EU procurement frameworks.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #3 · Europe bids for the AUKUS seabed layer

ARX Robotics· 13 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
China (military commentary)
China (military commentary)
Chinese military commentary has called uncrewed maritime equipment 'an excellent force multiplier' that cannot overturn the fundamental logic of naval warfare, the lone voice against the Western consensus that autonomy is the central axis of naval modernisation. Beijing reads the airdrop trial as an incremental logistics fix, not London's claimed doctrinal breakthrough.
Iran (Ministry of Foreign Affairs)
Iran (Ministry of Foreign Affairs)
Spokesman Kazem Gharibabadi said clearance of the Hormuz mines is 'Iran's sole responsibility', rejecting the Omani-authorised allied mine-clearance mission as a jurisdictional dispute rather than a technical favour. Tehran has not ratified UNCLOS, the treaty that would otherwise settle transit-passage rights through the strait.
Norway (Kongsberg Discovery)
Norway (Kongsberg Discovery)
Kongsberg Discovery's Camilla Kiss said the subsea-protection contract shows the industry 'moving from recognising the need to implementing solutions', selling fused sonar and C-Scope software to an unnamed buyer because fragmented cable, pipeline and platform ownership means no single navy commissions this the way it commissions a warship.
Ukraine (Trinity Robotics)
Ukraine (Trinity Robotics)
Trinity Robotics doubled its Konyk One production target to 2,200 units and opened French joint-venture talks, co-founder Oleksii Konik said, because wartime demand outpaces what factories inside a live-fire war zone can safely hold. Ukraine is answering the authority gap other actors face by manufacturing around it.
United Kingdom (Ministry of Defence and Royal Navy)
United Kingdom (Ministry of Defence and Royal Navy)
The Royal Navy proved it can airdrop a mine-hunting robot from any A400M into Sea State 4 waters, working round a front line of just six Type 45 destroyers and eight Type 23/26 frigates rather than waiting for more hulls. First Sea Lord Gwyn Jenkins's 'uncrewed wherever possible' doctrine gets a delivery method; it still lacks a named operational deployment.
Nautilus International
Nautilus International
Nautilus International pressed the unresolved liability gaps as the MASS Code entered force, noting a master stays legally responsible without saying who answers when ashore. Entry into force changed nothing an operator may legally do, leaving the seafarer-displacement question open.