A forthcoming European Parliament own‑initiative report sets out how the EU should adapt to the accelerating spread of drones and other emerging systems of warfare. Scheduled for a plenary vote in January 2026, the report calls for rapid integration of drone and counter‑drone capabilities across EU defence planning and stronger protection of critical civilian infrastructure.
Key Findings
- Integrate drones & counter‑drones across EU defence planning. The report urges a shift from an overly regulation‑driven posture to one focused on operational capabilities that keep pace with fast‑moving military and technological realities.
- Build a robust, autonomous European drone industry. To preserve strategic independence, the EU should reduce reliance on external suppliers and scale domestic production of critical technologies for both military and civil protection needs.
- Protect society and critical infrastructure. Member States and EU bodies should strengthen detection and neutralisation of low‑cost aerial threats near airports, military sites and other sensitive locations.
Why It Matters
EU countries report a sharp rise in hybrid warfare and airspace provocations, including drone flights near airports and military facilities, often attributed to Russia. In response, the EU has prioritised drone development and countermeasures through the European Defence Fund, PESCO projects and the European Defence Agency’s innovation work. A European drone defence initiative, framed in the European Defence Readiness Roadmap 2030, is slated to launch in early 2026, though some flagship defence proposals face political uncertainty over whether they should be driven by the Commission, Member States or NATO.