DroneShield (ASX: DRO) will open its first manufacturing facility outside Australia through an EU-based contract manufacturer, scaling annual production capacity from $500 million in 2025 to approximately $2.4 billion by end of 2026 1. First deliveries from the European line are expected mid-2026, following a $49.6 million European military contract awarded in December 2025 2. The company has not disclosed the country or contract manufacturer.
The expansion is a direct response to procurement politics. CEO Oleg Vornik told investors that European governments now treat local production as "a key expectation for competitive contract bidding" 3. That expectation has teeth: the EU's ReArm Europe initiative channels defence spending toward European-made or European-assembled systems, and several member states have begun writing domestic content requirements into counter-drone tenders. A firm that can only ship from Melbourne faces a structural disadvantage against one assembling on European soil — regardless of product quality.
The move also addresses a supply chain vulnerability flagged in earlier coverage: 60% component dependency on US and Chinese suppliers across the counter-drone sector. European assembly does not eliminate that dependency, but it gives DroneShield a compliance narrative and shorter logistics chains for maintenance and spares. With the counter-UAV market on the trajectory outlined at , the capacity bet is sized for a market that DroneShield's own analysis values at $63 billion in total addressable terms 4.
The competitive context matters. DroneShield's fivefold capacity increase arrives as patent activity in the sector surges — 126 counter-UAS patent applications filed globally in the year to March 2025, up 27%, with China filing at a 4:1 ratio over the United States according to UK IP firm Mathys & Squire 5. European manufacturers that cannot match this pace of protected innovation risk becoming system integrators rather than technology owners. DroneShield's bet is that combining Australian R&D with European production gives it enough of both to hold position as the market scales.
