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Drones: Industry & Defence
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DroneShield opens first EU factory

3 min read
20:57UTC

Australia's leading counter-drone firm will nearly quintuple production capacity by opening its first overseas factory, betting that European governments will increasingly require local manufacturing as a condition of contract awards.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

DroneShield's asset-light EU expansion bets on local-content procurement rules becoming the permanent baseline across European defence.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

DroneShield makes systems that detect and disable hostile drones. Rather than building a company-owned factory in Europe, it is contracting a local manufacturer to produce goods on its behalf. This matters because European governments increasingly require their defence suppliers to manufacture locally, not merely import finished products. DroneShield is positioning itself to meet that requirement and win larger contracts that purely Australian-made products could not compete for under emerging EU procurement rules.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

DroneShield's use of a contract manufacturer rather than a wholly owned facility mirrors the asset-light scaling model used in software and consumer electronics — unusual in defence manufacturing. It reduces capital expenditure and accelerates geographic reach, but introduces IP-protection and quality-assurance risks that European military customers may scrutinise more closely as contract values rise and classification sensitivities increase.

Root Causes

EU member states face a collective action problem: each prefers to buy from allies but must satisfy domestic industrial constituencies. Local-content mandates resolve this tension politically, making them sticky once embedded in tender specifications. DroneShield's expansion is a direct response to this structural incentive becoming commercially decisive rather than merely aspirational.

Escalation

Local-content requirements are hardening across EU procurement — not softening. The ReArm Europe initiative creates durable structural demand that makes DroneShield's capacity expansion a macro call on a multi-year cycle. European procurement officials are increasingly treating local sourcing as a baseline specification criterion, not merely a tie-breaker.

What could happen next?
  • Opportunity

    EU defence suppliers that establish local production capacity ahead of contract competitions gain a structural advantage as local-content becomes a baseline tender requirement rather than a scored criterion.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    Rapid capacity expansion without a fully committed order book exposes DroneShield to inventory and underutilisation risk if European procurement timelines slip beyond 2027.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Precedent

    DroneShield's EU contract-manufacturer model may become a template for other non-European counter-drone firms seeking market access under ReArm Europe without the capital burden of owned facilities.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Consequence

    US and Israeli counter-drone suppliers without EU local-content arrangements face structural exclusion from a rapidly growing European procurement market as requirements harden.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #2 · UK startup tops Pentagon's drone gauntlet

DroneXL· 19 Mar 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
DroneShield opens first EU factory
DroneShield's EU expansion is the clearest commercial signal yet that Europe's counter-drone procurement is shifting from off-the-shelf imports to sovereign manufacturing requirements — a structural change that will reshape which firms can compete for European defence contracts.
Different Perspectives
Anduril
Anduril
Anduril views consolidated procurement as enabling rapid scaling — the $20 billion enterprise contract replaces 120 separate Army contracts with a single vehicle. Arsenal-1's early opening positions it to argue manufacturing readiness that CCA competitors cannot yet demonstrate.
Ukrainian drone manufacturers
Ukrainian drone manufacturers
Ukrainian firms have battle-tested interceptors priced at $2,100–$2,500 per unit and demand from 11 nations, but the wartime export ban forces partnerships with Western firms rather than direct sales.
IISS
IISS
IISS characterises drone innovation in the Russo-Ukrainian war as adaptation within existing military paradigms rather than a transformation of warfare — a more cautious assessment than the Pentagon's procurement urgency suggests.
US Pentagon, Anduril and Shield AI
US Pentagon, Anduril and Shield AI
The Pentagon awarded Anduril a $20 billion enterprise vehicle and confirmed Gauntlet II's live EW red team, prioritising procurement speed over competition; Anduril began YFQ-44A production four months early. Shield AI countered by raising $2 billion and validating Hivemind on a European airframe, betting multi-platform interoperability hedges against Anduril's platform lock.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Ukraine
Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Ukraine
Zelenskyy publicly disclosed that 10 shadow drone factories have been built abroad to circumvent Ukraine's wartime export ban, signed 10-year defence deals with Saudi Arabia and Qatar, and deployed 228 specialists across five Gulf states. The disclosure is a calculated signal that the ban is fracturing and Kyiv is seeking revenue structures independent of Western aid.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia signed a 10-year defence deal with Ukraine and accepted the deployment of Ukrainian counter-drone specialists the US declined to partner on in August 2025. The Gulf pivot reflects Riyadh's assessment that Ukrainian combat-proven doctrine at $2,500 per interceptor is more cost-effective than Patriot-dependent air defence.