Britain became the first of five partner nations to award money under the Low-Cost Effectors and Autonomous Platforms (LEAP) framework on Monday 13 July, releasing its Low-Cost Air Defence Effectors (LCADE) slice as £3.16 million split across three small and medium-sized enterprises: Frankenberg Technologies, Greenjets and Cambridge Aerospace. Effectors are the interceptor drones and munitions that physically engage an incoming target, the cheap end of air defence that the war in Ukraine has made a procurement priority.
LEAP binds the UK, Poland, France, Italy and Germany on joint interceptor buying, and Britain reaching the cheque stage first gives the other four a working template. The award advances the £5 billion Defence Investment Plan Britain banked in June , turning a headline figure into contracts on three companies' books. It also adds a third parallel European procurement structure to the EU's AGILE programme and NATO's own marketplace, each competing to organise the same fragmented supplier base.
Cambridge Aerospace built the Skyhammer interceptor Britain rushed into procurement in April, and now, with no long production record behind it, it has won Ministry of Defence trust for a second counter-drone line in three months. Splitting the first money three ways rather than backing a single interceptor mirrors the distributed instinct on show in Washington the same week, though LEAP leaves interoperability between five national effector sets unsolved.
