In February, the UK and Latvia announced that they would lead the new Drone Capability Coalition, designed to rapidly supply Ukraine with tens of thousands of first person view drones.
The announced competition aims to produce drones at scale and at an affordable price point, leveraging the strength of Western industry.
Industry can find the details of how to apply via the UK's Defence Sourcing Portal. This competition is open to industry from any nation in the Ukraine Defence Contact Group.
Companies have until 28 June 2024 to submit their proposals, which will then be considered by the Drone Capability Coalition members and evaluated. Successful companies will receive orders to supply drones to Ukraine and, upon receipt of positive operational feedback, the intent is to place larger, follow up orders for FPV drones. Additional FPV competitions are expected to take place through 2024, building on the lessons learned from this first competition.
First person view drones have proven highly effective on the battlefield since Russia’s full-scale invasion, providing Ukrainian operators with situational awareness to target enemy positions, armoured vehicles, and ships with explosive ordnance.
Members of the coalition currently include the UK, Latvia, Australia, Canada, Denmark, Estonia, Germany, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Poland, Sweden, and Ukraine. Further countries are considering joining the coalition.
Full details for interested companies here.
Latvian Defense Minister Andris Sprūds took to social media to mark the opening of bids.
Together with the 🇬🇧UK and as a part of the Drone Coalition we have launched an industry competition to provide FPV drones for 🇺🇦Ukraine. Companies are invited to submit their offers until the 28th of June. https://t.co/Ktmuw90ILW
— Andris Spruds (@AndrisSpruds) June 3, 2024
As previously reported, on February 14, Latvia, Ukraine, Denmark, Estonia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Germany and Sweden signed a letter of intent to join the drone coalition. A day later on February 15, the United Kingdom also climbed aboard and said it was co-leader of the coalition. In May Canada also said it was joining.