The Ukrainian General Staff recorded 8,828 Russian kamikaze drones launched in the 24 hours ending 2 March, alongside 145 combat engagements, 86 airstrikes, 285 guided aerial bombs, and 3,573 artillery incidents 1.
Through 2025, Russia's daily drone average ranged from 2,000 to 3,000. At 8,828, the throughput has nearly tripled. Two production lines sustain this: Iranian production licences for Shahed-pattern drones, transferred in late 2024, and domestic manufacturing at facilities in Tatarstan and Yelabuga that scaled throughout 2025. Iran's contribution has shifted from finished drones to industrial know-how — the capacity to build them at scale on Russian soil.
Each drone costs $20,000–$50,000 to manufacture. Intercepting one with missile-based systems costs $100,000–$500,000, a cost advantage for the attacker of between two-to-one and twenty-five-to-one per engagement. electronic warfare and drone-on-drone interception are cheaper alternatives, but neither has scaled fast enough to match the production increase. The economics impose a forced trade-off: every dollar spent on drone interception is a dollar unavailable for artillery shells, vehicle maintenance, or troop rotation along a 1,000 km front.
Whether 8,828 represents a permanent capacity expansion or a single-day spike determines what comes next. Russia has surged drone launches before — during the October 2025 winter infrastructure campaign — then reverted to baseline within days as stockpiles depleted. If daily launches stabilise above 5,000, manufacturing output has permanently outpaced consumption. NATO's collective pledge of $60 billion for 2026 was calibrated against 2025's threat environment. Ukraine estimates it needs $120 billion — a gap of $60 billion that widens with every additional drone Russia can produce.
