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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
5APR

UK tenders GBP 130M Watchkeeper swap

3 min read
19:51UTC

The UK MoD issued Project Corvus, a competitive tender to replace the Watchkeeper tactical drone, worth GBP 130 to 156 million with an award expected imminently and bidders including Quantum Systems and Anduril UK.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The Watchkeeper replacement will set the British Army's tactical ISR drone through 2036.

Project Corvus is the open competitive tender to replace the Watchkeeper tactical drone, the British Army's primary ISR platform since 2014, a system repeatedly delayed and operationally underperforming. Contract value is estimated at GBP 130 to 156 million excluding VAT, with an initial five-year term from May 2026 and an option extending to 2036.

Confirmed bidders include Quantum Systems and Anduril (UK). Thales UK, which manufactured the original Watchkeeper, is also bidding, an irony that reflects the Army's determination to keep the incumbent in competition without preferential treatment.

A ten-year contract through 2036 makes this one of the most consequential British Army drone decisions of the current procurement cycle. Corvus sits alongside Project NYX (attack/loyal wingman) and the APKWS counter-drone deployment as the third pillar of the UK's evolving drone architecture, building on the autonomous-systems programme . The choice will reveal whether the Army favours European UAV hardware or US defence-AI software integration for its primary tactical ISR capability.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The British Army has been trying to replace its tactical reconnaissance drone (Watchkeeper) for years. Watchkeeper cost billions, took a decade to deliver, and then did not work well enough to use in most conditions. The British Army issued Project Corvus in May 2026 as an open tender with a GBP 130-156 million contract on offer. Two companies are confirmed as competing: Quantum Systems from Germany and Anduril from the US. Whatever wins will be the British Army's main eye-in-the-sky drone until at least 2036.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Watchkeeper's failure traces to three structural causes: the system was procured to Israeli Air Force standards, not British Army standards; the procurement timeline (original contract 2004, initial operational capability 2014) ran ten years at enormous cost overrun; and the system's reliability in UK weather conditions was insufficient for the intended operational tempo.

Corvus is the corrective: open competition, commercial off-the-shelf or near-COTS systems, shorter timeline.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    If Anduril wins Corvus alongside its Project NYX assessment contract, it will control both the British Army's tactical ISR and loyal-wingman programmes, an unprecedented concentration for a company that did not exist fifteen years ago. That outcome would represent a fundamental shift in UK defence industrial strategy toward US software-defined platforms.

First Reported In

Update #10 · NATO shoots down drone over Estonia

Find a Tender (UK Government)· 29 May 2026
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