The European Union unveiled the €115 million AGILE (Accelerated Government Innovation for Lethality and Effectiveness) defence technology programme on 7 April. For the first time, a single company can apply directly without forming a multinational consortium. The programme awaits European Parliament and Council approval.
The consortium requirement has historically added months or years to EU defence procurement timelines. Removing it is a structural change to how European defence technology reaches the market. If AGILE passes in its current form, it establishes a precedent for direct EU-to-company contracts that bypasses the national industrial politics constraining capability development across the bloc.
The €115 million pilot is modest relative to Britain's £4bn commitment and the Pentagon's multibillion-dollar Drone Dominance programme. The procedural innovation matters more than the sum: 20 to 30 projects at €1 to €5 million each, with shorter evaluation timelines and retroactive funding for completed work. For European drone startups that previously had no route into EU-level defence procurement, AGILE creates an addressable market that did not exist before.
AGILE arrives weeks after Gulf conflict escalation and DroneShield's Amsterdam headquarters opening . Gulf conflict dynamics are reshaping institutional procurement rules that Brussels had previously treated as politically fixed. Whether Parliament and Council approve the programme without reinstating consortium requirements will determine whether the structural change holds.
