Saturday, April 18, 2026

 

Drone tech evolves every 3-6 months, leaving Europe buying outpaced systems

Germany Ukraine Drones
Copyright AP Photo

By Evi Kiorri
Published on 


The war in Ukraine made clear that drone technology evolves faster than governments can buy it. Can defence systems keep up?

Before Russia’s invasion, no European military fielded more than 2,000 drones. Now, both armies are burning through up to seven million units a year. Drones have vaulted from niche gadgets to the backbone of modern warfare, and Europe is racing to catch up.

The numbers alone show an extraordinary transformation. Ukraine doubled drone output from 2.2 million in 2024 to 4.5 million in 2025. But sheer volume is only half the battle. The real race is technological; the guts of these machines are obsolete almost as soon as they roll off the line.

"Drones evolve technologically every three to six months," says Nikolaus Lang, Managing Director and Senior Partner at BCG and Global Leader of the BCG Henderson Institute. "So, it's also challenging to buy millions of drones that will be obsolete in 12 months from now." This creates a procurement paradox that no ministry of defence has yet fully solved: by the time a contract is signed, the system it covers may already be outdated.

Countries like Finland are discovering how fast software, communications, navigation, and counter-jamming technologies can age out of strategic usefulness. Ukraine’s battlefield has become the world's most brutal testing ground, and Ukrainian teams have shortened their design and deployment cycles from months to weeks, allowing real-time battlefield feedback to directly inform engineering improvements in successive drone generations.

This has driven a cat-and-mouse cycle of adaptation: fibre-optic drones were something of a novelty in 2024, yet by 2025, Russian production of just one model reached at least six thousand units per month. The pace is dizzying, and Europe's traditional procurement machinery was not built for it.

The exploitation gap

Here lies Europe’s core vulnerability. The continent leads in research, churning out world-class papers in AI, quantum tech, and telecoms. But academic output does not win wars. Europe’s labs are not translating breakthroughs into battlefield systems.

"Europe is in the exploration world, and the US is in the exploitation world," Lang says. Washington has invested roughly $70 billion in defence venture capital over the last decade. Europe has invested approximately $7 billion, one-tenth. That capital gap translates directly into a capability gap. The Pentagon showcased multiple American-made drone prototypes in June 2025, built with off-the-shelf components and developed in an average of just 18 months, a process that typically takes 6 years.

The US also benefits from a single, unified procurement market worth over $900 billion annually. Europe's combined defence budgets amount to around $450 billion, but they are spread across dozens of national procurement systems. "The 900 billion is one market. The 450 billion is all the EU markets together," Lang highlights.

Today, 80% of European procurement remains at the national level, and 90% of defence R&D is funded at the national level. The result is duplication, fragmentation, and an inability to achieve the scale required to turn research into real-world capability.

Sovereignty complicates matters. Many European drones use Chinese components, a dependency that worries NATO allies and raises supply chain concerns.

A five-to-ten-year journey

Analysts agree that Europe could build a sovereign defence technology stack, but not quickly. Lang, co-author with General Lavigne, sees it taking "probably five, but more likely ten years." NATO is already establishing drone innovation hubs and joint programs to standardise swarm tactics, AI, and resilient communications.

The goal is to close the gap between Europe’s research and its slow deployment. That requires more capital for startups, faster procurement, and accepting that in drone warfare, perfect can be the enemy of timely.

"Ukraine is innovating at wartime speed," Lang warns. "Europe is still in peacetime speed." Changing that rhythm, before the next crisis forces the issue, is the defining defence challenge of this decade.


The EU is boosting drone production - is it ready for war?

Unmanned aerial vehicles in the sky in Russia
Copyright AP Photo

By Leticia Batista Cabanas
Published on 

Is the European Union doing as much as it can to protect its citizens?

Modern warfare has evolved way beyond basic weapons, and unmanned drones are now central to conflict. The EU is increasing drone production to defend Europeans against these changing threats.

Recent wars, like Ukraine and Iran, show that drones are used in large numbers and quickly depleted. But European countries still rely heavily on foreign suppliers for drones, creating strategic vulnerability.

The EU wants to reduce this dependence by building its own industrial capacity, and introducing new funding programs to support drone manufacturing, like the European Defence Industry Programme. It’s also coming up with new subsidies to boost key components used in drone systems, and faster funding mechanisms to support startups and innovation.

A key priority is drones. Drone have become a priority and the EU is rushing to develop and test new technologies, by working with partners like Ukraine, to build joint initiatives and to create a shared industrial ecosystem for production.

It’s also investing in systems to detect and stop hostile drones, and developing new standards to ensure drones are secure and reliable. Expanded surveillance programs will use drones to monitor borders and infrastructure.

Can the EU shift from regulation to large-scale production, to strengthen its defense capabilities? Our poll is anonymous and takes just a few seconds to complete. The results will feature across the EU. XL coverage -in videos, articles, and newsletters- and will help shape our reporting as we explore how Europe can secure its place in the age of artificial intelligence**.**


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