Military | Europe
The EU Just Approved a €1.5 Billion Programme to Boost European and Ukrainian Defence Industry Together
The EU has approved a €1.5 billion defence work programme integrating Ukrainian production capacity. Here is what this specific programme builds and why it matters for European security.
The EU has approved a €1.5 billion defence work programme integrating Ukrainian production capacity. Here is what this specific programme builds and why it matters for European security.
- The EU has approved a €1.
- The European Commission's adoption of a €1.
- The programme operates through the European Defence Fund's work programme architecture, which identifies specific defence technology areas where EU investment is designed to close capability gaps and build industrial cap...
The EU has approved a €1.
The European Commission's adoption of a €1.5 billion work programme to boost European and Ukrainian defence industry — confirmed in March 2026 and reported in the Mayer Brown Europe Daily News — represents the most concrete integration of Ukrainian defence production capacity into EU defence industrial planning that has been formally approved to date.
The programme operates through the European Defence Fund's work programme architecture, which identifies specific defence technology areas where EU investment is designed to close capability gaps and build industrial capacity that member states' national defence budgets cannot individually sustain. The integration of Ukrainian industry into this framework — rather than treating Ukraine as simply a recipient of aid — reflects a deliberate policy decision to build Ukraine's production capacity as part of the European defence industrial base rather than as a separate, dependent appendage.
Specific elements of the programme cover: collaborative development of drone and counter-drone systems that explicitly include Ukrainian companies as consortium members eligible for EU funding; ammunition production capacity expansion that incorporates Ukrainian propellant and shell manufacturing into European supply chains; and electronic warfare research that draws on Ukrainian operational experience as an input to European development programmes.
The €1.5 billion figure sits alongside the STEP programme's €29 billion mobilisation for EU competitiveness — a broader economic development instrument that includes but is not limited to defence investment. Together, these instruments represent European public investment in the defence industrial base at a scale that was politically inconceivable before February 2022.
For Ukraine, being integrated into EU defence industrial programmes as a participant rather than merely a beneficiary changes the strategic calculation of EU membership candidacy. Each co-production arrangement, each joint research programme, each supply chain integration creates ties of economic and industrial interdependence that reinforce the political commitment to Ukraine's eventual membership more durably than any number of diplomatic statements.