Britain committed more than £5 billion over four years to drones and autonomous systems on 29 June, when Defence Secretary Dan Jarvis and Prime Minister Keir Starmer published the Defence Investment Plan 1. The plan is the government's four-year budget for military equipment, and this line folds programmes readers have tracked separately into one pot: Project NYX, the Apache loyal-wingman effort funded at £10 million in May , now scoped for up to 24 armed autonomous drones by 2030; Project Corvus, the Watchkeeper surveillance-drone replacement ; RAPSTONE, worth £50 million over twelve months for Army first-person-view (FPV) and interceptor drones; and Storm Shroud, an uncrewed electronic-warfare drone for the Royal Air Force.
A new Uncrewed Systems Centre at Swindon and an Uncrewed Systems Taskforce sit beneath the funding line. The plan turns the £4 billion autonomous-systems doubling announced in the spring into named programmes with dates attached. The Royal Navy's Type 91 to 94 uncrewed surface vessels also draw funding, though that maritime strand runs through Britain's wider autonomous-fleet plans rather than this drone line.
John Healey quit as defence secretary on 11 June in a reported dispute with Starmer that the autonomous-systems budget was too small. Jarvis, his successor, published the plan eighteen days later at a figure larger than Healey is said to have fought for. The account of that dispute rests on trade-press and secondary reporting rather than a primary statement, so treat the vindication as suggested, not confirmed.
Whether £5 billion buys production or merely commissions a test centre and a taskforce is the open question, because Swindon is a proving ground, not a factory.
