Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Drones: Industry & Defence
13APR

EU drops consortium rule for AGILE fund

2 min read
13:26UTC

The EU unveiled its €115 million AGILE defence technology programme, the first to allow single-company applications without requiring multinational consortia.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Removing the consortium requirement could accelerate European defence technology deployment by years.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The EU has historically required that multiple companies from different countries form a partnership before applying for defence funding. This was meant to encourage cooperation, but in practice it added so much cost and delay that many small companies simply never applied. AGILE changes that: a single British, French, or Polish startup can now apply for EU defence funding on its own. That is genuinely new. The total fund is €115 million, which across 20-30 projects works out to roughly €4-6 million each. For a small drone startup, that is meaningful early-stage capital with no consortium overhead.

What could happen next?
  • Opportunity

    If AGILE passes without the consortium requirement being reinstated, European drone startups gain a direct funding route to EU defence procurement that bypasses the national industrial gatekeeping that has historically excluded them.

  • Precedent

    The single-company application model, if successful, will be cited in future EU defence procurement reform debates as evidence that the consortium requirement is a bureaucratic rather than a strategic necessity.

First Reported In

Update #5 · Gulf drone war rewrites procurement

Euronews· 13 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Chinese drone manufacturers (DJI, Autel)
Chinese drone manufacturers (DJI, Autel)
Autel's Ralls Corp Fifth Amendment filing and DJI's Ninth Circuit quantification of USD 1.56 billion in 2026 losses are parallel constitutional attacks on a classified-evidence exclusion mechanism; neither company can contest the intelligence allegations directly, so both are betting on due-process doctrine to reopen the FCC authorisation route.
Ukraine (SSEC export regulator)
Ukraine (SSEC export regulator)
Baltic states bought Lithuanian Merops and Swedish LVKV 90 stopgaps while Ukraine's cheapest combat-proven interceptors at USD 2,100 to USD 2,500 per unit remain legally blocked under EU conflict-aggravation rules; Perennial Autonomy, built on Ukrainian combat data, can now sell via Munich while direct Ukrainian sales to the same buyers remain prohibited.
Helsing
Helsing
HX-2 combat-proven status, a EUR 1.46 billion German framework, an $18 billion valuation, and the OHB space JV together constitute the first credible European counterweight to Anduril's US stack. The critical test is whether European procurement offices can maintain sovereign AI discipline under operational urgency, or default to the US integration speed that drove the Netherlands Lattice decision.
Anduril Industries
Anduril Industries
A USD 61 billion valuation on USD 2.2 billion revenue prices in the assumption that Lattice becomes the default Western counter-drone software layer. The Netherlands adoption and Project NYX inclusion suggest the architecture bet is converting; the S-1 filing window opens when quarterly growth sustains the 27x multiple.
European Union
European Union
The EUR 115 million AGILE programme was designed before Baltic states began emergency national purchases worth ten times the total EU budget; calling for coordination on 26 May after each country had signed contracts is not a procurement policy, it is a statement of concern with no enforcement teeth.
UK Ministry of Defence
UK Ministry of Defence
Britain has committed GBP 752 million to Ukraine drones, GBP 115 million to Hormuz, APKWS to Gulf combat, and three concurrent procurement programmes, all driven by the same operational pressure. Project NYX and Corvus together set the British Army's drone architecture through 2036; the autumn down-select will reveal whether Washington or London holds the architectural preference.