Forsvarsudvalget 2023-24
FOU Alm.del Bilag 96
Offentligt
2837229_0001.png
EUROPEAN
COMMISSION
HIGH REPRESENTATIVE
OF THE UNION FOR
FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND
SECURITY POLICY
Brussels, 5.3.2024
JOIN(2024) 10 final
JOINT COMMUNICATION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL,
THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE
COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS
A new European Defence Industrial Strategy: Achieving EU readiness through a
responsive and resilient European Defence Industry
EN
EN
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0002.png
I
NTRODUCTION
On 14 and 15 December 2023, the European Council, in line with the Versailles
Declaration
1
and the Strategic Compass for Security and Defence
2
, underlined that more
needs to be done to fulfil the Union’s objectives of increasing defence readiness
3
. The
European Council also emphasised the need to strengthen the European defence
technological and industrial base (EDTIB), including SMEs, and to make it innovative,
competitive and resilient. A stronger and more capable EU in security and defence will
contribute positively to global and transatlantic security and is complementary to the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), which remains the foundation of collective defence
for its members.
EU Defence readiness can be defined as a steady state of preparedness of the Union and
its Member States to protect the security of its citizens, the integrity of its territory and
critical assets or infrastructures, and its core democratic values and processes. This
includes an ability to provide military assistance to its partners, such as Ukraine. In line
with the Strategic Compass, it encompasses the ability to act more quickly and decisively
when facing crises, secure our citizens against rapidly evolving threats, invest in the needed
capabilities and technologies and partner with others to achieve common goals.
This
Strategy also responds to proposals made by citizens in the Conference on the Future of
Europe
4
.
A strong EU defence industry is an essential pre-requisite to achieve defence readiness.
This European Defence Industrial Strategy, based on the findings of the defence
investment gap analysis presented in the Joint Communication of 18 May 2022
5
, and
following a comprehensive stakeholder consultation process, proposes an ambitious
approach underpinned by a European Defence Industry Programme (EDIP), together with
a set of flanking measures and alongside the European Defence Fund (EDF), to strengthen
the industrial pillar of EU defence readiness. This effort should be steadily pursued beyond
the current Multiannual Financial Framework (2021-2027), with EU funding delivered
through future instruments whose scope and design will draw upon the experience gained
through the implementation of the different defence programmes.
1
Informal meeting of the Heads of State or Government Versailles Declaration 10 and 11 March 2022,
20220311-versailles-declaration-en.pdf (europa.eu)
A Strategic Compass for Security and Defence - For a European Union that protects its citizens, values
and interests and contributes to international peace and security, Brussels, 21 March 2022, 7371/22,
pdf
(europa.eu)
European Council meeting, Brussels, 15 December 2023, EUCO 20/23, europeancouncilconclusions-
14-15-12-2023-en.pdf (europa.eu). Conclusions read: “Having taken stock of work carried out to
implement its previous conclusions, the Versailles Declaration and the Strategic Compass, the European
Council underlines that more needs to be done to fulfil the Union’s objectives of increasing defence
readiness and increasing defence expenditure in a collaborative way, including enhancing defence
investment and capability development, and to achieve an effective and integrated market for defence”.
EU public opinion surveys confirm the strong interest and high expectations of Europeans about more
cooperation in defence matters. According to the Standard Eurobarometer 100 (December 2023), 79%
of Europeans believe that co-operation in defence matters at EU level should be increased, and 69%
consider that EU need to reinforce its capacity to produce military equipment.
Joint Communication on the Defence Investment Gaps Analysis and Way Forward. Brussels, 18.5.2022
JOIN (2022) 24 final.
2
3
4
5
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0003.png
The steep increase of regional and global threats and security challenges and in particular
the return of high-intensity conventional warfare in Europe requires an urgent step-change
in the speed and scale at which EDTIB can identify, develop and produce the requisite
military equipment across the full spectrum, starting from the most urgent needs. Further
strengthening and streamlining the tools and instruments that the Union has put in place
over the past years is necessary in this respect. Defence industrial readiness must be
strengthened across the Union, paying particular attention to the specific implications that
this has for those Member States most exposed to the risk of materialisation of
conventional military threats.
Defence industrial readiness can only be achieved if the Member States’ continued increase
of defence spending is enabled, through the appropriate tools and incentives, to actually
prioritise collaborative investments. This will reinforce both their military capabilities and
the defence industrial base on which the EU and its Member States can rely. This will also
directly reinforce NATO, as Member States, including those who are NATO Allies
6
, have
a single set of forces that they can make available in different frameworks. It also
contributes to the Union’s wider economic security, as the EDTIB is a key driver of
technological innovation and resilience across our societies.
This strategy intends to enhance and support the Member States’ efforts to
invest more,
better, together, and European
(Section 2). The increased availability of defence
products and systems should be achieved thanks to
a more efficient and responsive
EDTIB, relying on enhanced security of supply
(Section 3). It is important to develop
the
financial means
to underpin EU defence industrial readiness (Section 4). In addition,
a defence readiness culture should be mainstreamed
including across all EU policies
(Section 5). Finally,
partnerships
should be leveraged to enhance readiness and resilience
(Section 6).
1.
A
CHIEVING DEFENCE READINESS
E
UROPEAN DEFENCE INDUSTRY
THROUGH A MORE RESPONSIVE AND RESILIENT
1.1. Defence readiness: imperative in the current geopolitical environment
Faced with the return of high intensity warfare in Europe, following Russia’s unprovoked,
full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the Union must swiftly enhance its defence
readiness.
The rules-based global order is challenged to its core, and countries in the Union’s vicinity
and beyond are increasingly affected by tensions, instability, hybrid threats and armed
conflicts. Strategic competitors are investing heavily in military capabilities, defence
industrial capacities and critical technologies, whilst the integrity of our supply chains and
unimpeded access to resources can no longer be taken for granted.
The EU and its Member States are also confronted with widespread hybrid threats,
illustrated by a growing number of cyberattacks, sabotage, hacking of critical infrastructure
and assets, disinformation, and foreign information manipulation and interference. They
also face the contestation of Europe’s access to strategic domains such as the space, cyber,
6
22 out of the 27 Member States are currently NATO Members, with Sweden expected to join the
Alliance imminently.
2
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0004.png
air and maritime domains. These developments are challenging our security, prosperity,
and democratic values.
The defence of the Member States’ territory and citizens is primarily a national
responsibility, including through allies’ commitments in the context of NATO. Against
that background, the geopolitical developments point to a compelling need for Europe to
take increased strategic responsibility for its own security, including to assist key partners
such as Ukraine. Under the guidance of the Strategic Compass, the EU is and must continue
to be a stronger player in security and defence, thus a more reliable security provider and
capable defence actor not only for its own citizens but also to the benefit of international
peace and security.
A stronger and more capable EU in the field of security and defence will also contribute
positively to global and transatlantic security and is complementary to NATO. For those
Member States, who are also members of NATO, the Alliance remains the foundation of
their collective defence. Defence readiness requires the planning, development and
operational availability of the necessary defence capabilities and strategic enablers, the
mastery of critical technologies and the ability to procure, operate and protect the required
full spectrum of capabilities, infrastructures and assets.
Achieving defence readiness therefore requires investing massively, in a coordinated
manner, in the required defence capabilities, including in relevant critical infrastructure.
This requires the agility to constantly integrate innovation that increasingly originates from
small and non-traditional players, which all too often struggle to see their potential
contribution recognised. Adversaries have engaged in a global race for technological
supremacy requiring from all actors ever faster and increasingly costly investment cycles:
the EU cannot afford falling behind.
Even those Member States with the largest defence budgets in the Union at their disposal
are increasingly facing difficulties to invest at the required levels on a standalone basis,
exposing the EU to widening capability and industrial gaps and to increased strategic
dependencies. The same goes for prime manufacturers and their supply chains. Defence
readiness therefore calls for more cooperation and collective action. In times of high
intensity warfare, this requires the ability to mass produce a large set of defence equipment
such as ammunition, drones, air defence missiles and systems, deep strike and intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities, as well as the ability to ensure its swift and
sufficient availability.
To enable this mass production, the organisation of the defence industrial sector needs to
evolve.
Box 1. Defence acquisitions in the EU: buying predominantly alone and from abroad
As highlighted by the Defence Investment Gap Analysis and Way Forward, had all
Member States spent 2% of their GDP on defence, with 20% dedicated to investment,
since 2006 until 2020, this would have resulted in approximately an additional
EUR 1,1
trillion for defence,
of which around EUR 270 billion on investment.
In 2022, defence expenditures of the Member States increased for the eighth year in a
row, amounting to EUR 240 billion
7
.
78% of the defence acquisitions by EU Member
7
Against a historical low of EUR 171 billion in 2014. See European Defence Agency Defence Data 2022,
key findings and analysis.
3
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0005.png
States between the start of Russia’s war of aggression and June 2023 were made
from outside the EU,
with the US alone representing 63%
8
.
Between 2021 and 2022, there has been a 7% increase in the procurement of new
equipment, but
only 18%
of the total equipment spending was devoted to EU
collaborative defence equipment procurement in 2022
9
,
far below the current 35%
collective benchmark set by Member States
10
.
1.2. Defence Readiness requires a strong, responsive and innovative EDTIB
As highlighted in the Strategic Compass and the EU Heads of State and governments’
Granada Declaration
11
, strengthening EU’s defence readiness and capability investments
requires a strong, agile and resilient technological and industrial base.
The EDTIB is an essential and integral element to ensure that our societies are secure and
prosperous today and in the future. A responsive and competitive EDTIB is the foundation
of any credible European role in its own defence and security.
EU defence industrial readiness, today and in the future, requires public and private
investments across the full spectrum of needs, to enable the defence industry’s
responsiveness in time and scale to the needs of Member States. Innovation must be a
constant focus of attention, while resilience to external shocks and disruptions should be
ensured.
Box 2. The EDTIB today: a strong potential, to be further tapped into
The Union’s defence technological and industrial base today consists of a combination
of a large set of prime contractors, with mid-caps and a large number of small and
medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).
Besides European leaders producing world-class advanced systems, mostly located in a
handful of Member States, a no less crucial role is played by a wealth of smaller, but
often critical platform manufacturers, equipment suppliers, consumables - such as
ammunitions – producers, sub-suppliers, and niche producers,
spread all across the
EU.
The Defence Joint Procurement Task Force industry mapping showed that prime
manufacturers for the 46 most urgently needed items were located in 23 Member States.
The EDTIB is competitive at global level, with an estimated
annual turnover of
EUR 70 billion
and strong export volumes (more than EUR 28 billion in 2021). Overall,
the EDTIB is estimated to employ around
500,000 people
12
.
8
Jean-Pierre Maulny, THE IMPACT OF THE WAR IN UKRAINE ON THE EUROPEAN DEFENCE
MARKET, IRIS, September 2023,
19_ProgEuropeIndusDef_JPMaulny.pdf (iris-france.org)
2022 Coordinated Annual Review on Defence.
Established by the EDA Ministerial Steering Board in 2007.
European Council, the Granada Declaration, 6 October 2023.
Data source: SIPRI estimates for the European Commission.
4
9
10
11
12
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
Notwithstanding its overall competitiveness, the EDTIB’s ability to unleash its full
potential is undermined by years of underinvestment, despite the progress made over the
last years. This is the consequence of Member States’ policy and budgetary choices in the
past decades, and in a different geopolitical context, to allocate the dividend of peace to
other societal uses. Persistent industrial fragmentation along national lines also acts as a
hindrance to the optimum efficiency of defence investments. These trends have led to a
significantly smaller comparative size of the EU defence market and presence on the global
stage, increased dependencies on third countries, impairing the EDTIB’s ability to punch
at its weight.
1.3. Too little cooperative investment in the EU keeps the EDTIB punching below
its weight
In a complex market in which national governments are the only buyers, Member States
are still insufficiently coordinating, pooling and joining their defence planning and
procurement decisions despite the range of European tools and frameworks at their
disposal. Hence, demand is still largely organised along national lines, with most
investment decisions arising from domestic considerations, and based on national
programming, often failing to factor in broader strategic and efficiency considerations. As
a result, and despite certain phases of consolidation in the past decades, the supply side
remains also essentially organised along national lines, with Member States opting where
possible for national solutions, because of industrial and security of supply considerations.
This results in a scattered EDTIB, acting in different, too narrow defence markets, rather
than in a single, much larger and integrated one.
This weakens the EDTIB. First, the demand side does not express itself collectively in an
optimal way. This results in duplications and foregone opportunities to mutualise and
synchronise investment in commonly needed equipment or infrastructure. Second, the
supply side is not incentivised to cooperate or even integrate to match a more efficient
expression of demand. It suffers from lack of predictability and critical mass in the orders
placed, thereby failing to seize economies of scale. Third, especially recently, Member
States tend to acquire off-the-shelf from third countries, thereby drying up internal demand
and investing European taxpayers’ money in jobs and key technologies abroad rather than
in Europe.
This obliges in turn the EDTIB to focus on exports to ensure its viability, resulting in a risk
of excessive reliance on third countries’ orders, with the consequence that responding to
Member States’ orders may be less a priority than honouring third country contracts in
case of crises and related shortages.
Security of supply is undermined by the combination of the above patterns. The single
market has become a reality at lower tiers where supply chains span widely across borders.
However, this is not reflected in a collective strategic governance at the EU level that
would support security of supply in crisis scenarios. The trend of overreliance on third
countries’ supplies further undermines security of supply and freedom of action in case of
crises.
1.4. Helping Ukraine withstand the Russian aggression: a decisive Union
contribution, but strong potential for improvement
The EU and its Member States have demonstrated their capacity to swiftly mobilise
support for Ukraine’s armed forces, including from the EDTIB. As of late January 2024,
5
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0007.png
the EU and its Member States collectively delivered more than EUR 28 billion worth of
military equipment to Ukraine.
Thanks to the European Peace Facility (EPF), the EU supported Ukraine within a few days
of the Russian full-scale invasion of February 2022, by reimbursing Member States who
sent military assistance to Ukraine. The EPF is incentivising further deliveries of lethal and
non-lethal equipment to Ukraine. With the three-track ammunition initiative
13
, the Council
agreed an ambitious framework to incentivize the delivery and procurement of artillery
ammunition and ground-to-ground missiles, as well as industrial ramp-up.
Through this initiative, Member States have placed orders in the EU and Norway to
procure additional artillery ammunition, including by using the framework contracts
14
that
the European Defence Agency negotiated on their behalf with the European defence
industry. The Union’s support delivered through the Regulation on supporting ammunition
production (ASAP)
15
is increasing and speeding-up its capacity to support Ukraine and
replenish national stocks.
The EDTIB has also demonstrated its ability to effectively sustain these efforts. Since the
beginning of the war, the EDTIB has increased its production capacity in artillery
ammunition by 50%.
It is already capable of producing one million artillery rounds per
year and is anticipated to reach a capacity of over 1.4 million by the end of 2024 and 2
million by the end of 2025.
Beyond the donations from Member States’ stocks and from EPF-funded procurement, the
EDTIB has also provided a significant amount of artillery ammunition through direct
contracts with Ukraine, displaying its ability to contribute to its fight against the invading
forces.
The EU also put in place new initiatives such as the Regulation on establishing an
instrument for the reinforcement of the European defence industry through common
procurement (EDIRPA)
16
. Still, much more needs to be done, both at industrial and
governmental level.
1.5. From emergency responses to readiness: time for a paradigm shift
It is time to move from emergency responses to structural EU defence readiness across all
time horizons. The EU needs to secure the availability to its Member States and partners
of consumables in the requisite volumes, including during crisis times, while ensuring the
timely development and delivery of next generation high end critical capabilities in the
coming years. This also takes into account the Ukrainian defence needs. Additionally,
secure access to contested domains such as cyber, space, maritime and air, cannot be
protected effectively by a single Member State. Therefore, the EU needs to develop its
13
Delivery and joint procurement of ammunition for Ukraine, Brussels, 20 March 2023, 7632/23,
pdf
(europa.eu)
As of today, 60 framework contracts have been signed by the EDA with European industry.
Regulation (EU) 2023/1525 on supporting ammunition production (ASAP), OJ L 185, 24.7.2023, p. 7–
25.
Regulation (EU) 2023/2418 on establishing an instrument for the reinforcement of the European defence
industry through common procurement (EDIRPA), OJ L, 2023/2418, 26.10.2023.
6
14
15
16
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0008.png
capacity to ensure its access to these areas collectively, through the necessary investment
in European level solutions.
A competitive EDTIB contributing to the security of Union’s citizens means an industrial
sector capable of maintaining its technological excellence while delivering what is needed,
when it is needed, without restrictions stemming from excessive external dependencies or
bottlenecks
17
. An industry investing in new capacities and ready to shift to a ‘wartime’
economic model whenever needed, is essential.
This implies a collective public and private engagement. The EU is ready to support both
Member States and the EDTIB by de-risking investments, contributing to a more ambitious
defence industrial policy at EU level. To achieve this, the Union needs to maximise the
benefits of competition, cooperation and consolidation. By the same token, the
competitiveness of the EDTIB and its ability to export must be preserved, whilst
nonetheless ensuring that Member States can rely fully on their defence industry to deliver
on their needs in a timely manner and in the requisite volume, when the security of EU
citizens is at stake.
This strategy introduces measures i) to support EU defence industrial readiness, based on
an increased coordination of Member States’ defence needs, ii) to strengthen the EDTIB
to produce more, while ensuring its security of supply, iii) to develop the financial means
to underpin EU defence industrial readiness and iv) to mainstream a defence industrial
readiness culture, while v) working effectively with partners. As a first immediate
initiative, the Commission is proposing a new Regulation establishing EDIP, to ensure
continuity of support to the EDTIB in the current Multi Annual Financial Framework
(MFF), while testing new forms of support in view of the next programming period.
The proposed EDIP will expand in time and scope the support to the competitiveness of
the EDTIB brought by EDIRPA and ASAP. It will incentivise cooperation in the
procurement phase of defence products manufactured by the EDTIB, support the
industrialisation of products stemming from EDF funded actions or other EU cooperative
frameworks and more generally support the defence industrial ramp-up in the Union. It
will also establish an EU Security of Supply regime to enhance solidarity and effectiveness
within the Union in response to crises.
2.
L
EVERAGING
E
UROPEAN
READINESS THROUGH INVESTMENT
:
M
ORE
,
BETTER
,
TOGETHER
,
Ultimately, the realisation of the defence industrial ramp-up depends on an increased
volume of orders from Member States, which cannot be placed without increased defence
budgets. Member States have started to increase their budgets at an extraordinary pace
since February 2022 (see Box 1). However, significantly greater investment at national and
European level is required to structurally adapt the EU industry, make it more innovative
and competitive, to face the new security reality. It is now vital that the Union collectively
makes the most out of this ongoing budgetary increase to achieve defence industrial
readiness. To that end, the Commission and the High Representative / Head of the Agency
17
The EDTIB would benefit from a more resilient EU Single Market through the implementation of
measures, especially in times of crisis, laid out in "Updating the 2020 New Industrial Strategy: Building
a stronger Single Market for Europe’s recovery " COM(2021) 350.
7
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
are ready to support Member States to continue investing more, but also to do that better,
together, and European.
2.1. Investing better
Investing better means targeting investments where it matters the most, avoiding
duplication and increasing efficiency. This requires enhanced coordination of Member
States’ investment plans and efforts.
2.1.1.
A new joint programming and procurement function
As announced within the Joint Communication on Defence Investment Gaps Analysis and
Way Forward, a structured approach to programming and procurement will reinforce
transparency, coordination and consistency between Member States, and between the latter
and EU institutions. It will complement and streamline existing initiatives in the capability,
industrial, research and defence infrastructure realms, allowing for refined and shared
prioritisation, as well as sustained cooperation efforts.
A
Defence Industrial Readiness Board (hereafter ‘the Board’)
will bring together
Member States, the High Representative/Head of the Agency, and the Commission, in
different formats 1) to perform the EU defence joint programming and procurement
function envisaged in the Joint Communication on Defence Investment Gap Analysis and
2) to support the implementation of EDIP.
To perform the
EU defence joint programming and procurement function,
building on
the successful work of the Defence Joint Procurement Task Force, the Board will provide
a forum, to be convened by the Commission and the High Representative/Head of Agency,
to discuss and refine identified priorities at EU level, without prejudice to their respective
roles and responsibilities. In this format, to be established by this strategy, the Board shall
also support the coordination and de-confliction of Member States procurement plans and
provide strategic guidance in view of more effectively matching demand and supply. In
this regard, the work in the context of the Board should enable a common understanding
among Member States of the EDTIB composition and promote a shared awareness on
production capacities in the Union. Based on a consolidated view of current industrial
capacities, the members meeting in the context of the Board should assess the required
production capacities to meet identified procurement needs and suggest corresponding
defence industrial production objectives, in particular for the most critical capabilities.
As regards this EU defence joint programming and procurement function, meetings in the
context of the Board will be prepared and co-chaired by the Commission and the High
Representative/Head of Agency.
Furthermore, for the purpose of
supporting the implementation of EDIP, the Board will
be formally established within the EDIP Regulation
notably to ensure security of supply
at EU level but also inform and assist in the implementation of the different supporting
measures to the EDTIB developed in EDIP. In this configuration, the Board itself will be
chaired by the Commission, with the participation of the European External Action Service
(EEAS) and of the European Defence Agency (EDA).
Complementing this effort, to ensure an effective government-to-industry co-operation and
to establish a closer dialogue and engagement, a high-level
European Defence Industry
Group will be established.
This Group will meet in specific configurations (e.g. sector-
specific), depending on the issue at hand, and will function as a privileged interlocutor of
8
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
the Board to consult with industry and to increase consistency between Member States’
plans and what the EDTIB can deliver, without prejudice to applicable competition rules
within the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union.
2.1.2.
From strategic programming to Projects of common interest
One of the roles of Board, acting as the new EU level joint programming and procurement
function will be the
joint identification of possible Projects of common interest to focus
EU effort and funding programmes.
The new programming and procurement function
will be based on the existing instruments and initiatives, notably the Capability
Development Plan (CDP), the Coordinated Annual Review on Defence (CARD) and the
Permanent Structured Cooperation (PESCO).
In view of increasing its defence readiness in the current security context, the Union should
identify, within the EU Capability Development Priorities,
European Defence Projects
of Common Interest
on which to focus efforts and resources. By investing more, better,
together and European, Member States will be able to maximise the impact of their
investments to develop and operate full-spectrum capabilities. This will contribute to
secure access to strategic domains and contested spaces, including by developing
appropriate systems that would serve as European defence infrastructure of common
interest and use. This would furthermore contribute to ensuring the availability of strategic
enablers required for missions and operations, as well as for the EU Rapid Deployment
Capacity.
By 2035, the EU should have in place, or at a mature stage of development, projects for
capabilities that are European by nature. Subject to Member States’ agreement, these could
include: capabilities related to integrated European air and missile defence (whose
criticality has been confirmed during Russia’s unprovoked military aggression against
Ukraine), Space Domain Awareness, a network of cyber defensive capabilities
commensurate to the need to effectively protect the Union, as well as properly dimensioned
maritime and underwater protective assets.
2.2. Investing together
Investing more together is the pre-requisite of a stronger EU defence readiness. Member
States must cooperate more throughout the capability life cycle, starting at the research,
development and procurement stages. Instruments to identify capability priorities (CDP)
and collaborative opportunities (Coordinated Annual Review on Defence) already exist. It
is imperative to ensure that they are effectively used to plan for, invest in and ultimately
deliver concrete defence capabilities.
2.2.1.
Common procurement as the norm whenever relevant: expanding the intervention
logic developed under EDIRPA
To further contribute to an effective expression of demand to support the competitiveness
of the EDTIB, the
Commission is proposing to expand the EDIRPA intervention logic
and intensify the support to the common procurement of defence products stemming from
the EDTIB. This window of the EDIP will offset the financial costs associated with the
complexity of cooperation, going beyond the most urgent and critical defence products,
thus broadening the intervention area of EDIRPA.
The joint procurement support window of EDIP will help speed up in a collaborative
manner the adjustment of industry to structural changes. It will also incentivise solidarity
9
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0011.png
between Member States by enabling them to increase efficiencies in public spending and
contribute to interoperability and interchangeability.
The Commission and the High Representative/Head of the Agency
will measure progress
achieved in the consolidation of defence demand following the adoption of this strategy.
Collaborative research, development (R&D) and procurement of defence equipment
should progressively become the norm in the EU.
To date,
Member States have not been able to meet
the benchmark they agreed first in
2007, of spending 35%, of their total equipment budget in European collaborative
equipment procurement
18
.
To shift towards a sustained, long-term demand signal to the EDTIB, it is proposed to
Member States, to achieve the goal of
procuring at least 40% of defence equipment in
a collaborative manner by 2030.
With the fulfilment of this goal, ongoing and upcoming additional defence investments by
Member States will deliver more efficient outcomes, thereby decisively boosting the
resilience and security of the EU. The significant incentives provided at EU level by
EDIRPA and EDIP, combined with experience in the context of the EPF and the greater
sense of necessity, urgency and solidarity resulting from the current geopolitical situation,
make this both essential and realistic.
2.2.2.
Acting more systematically in support of interoperability and interchangeability
Ukraine’s experience in its fight against Russia’s unjustified aggression evidenced the
value of interoperable and interchangeable defence capabilities. Lessons learned from the
battlefield showed the challenges of using multiple similar, but not truly interoperable nor
interchangeable weapons systems, including ammunition of the same calibre produced in
different Member States. In addition to presenting an acute operational challenge, this
reduces competitiveness, economies of scale and hence limits the functioning of the
internal market. The current and unsustainable limitations in this respect find their root
causes in issues related to national requirements, the uptake of standards, and certification.
To defragment the market, three elements are equally important: the definition by Member
States of common requirements, the use of existing standards or the generation of new
ones, and a greater mutual recognition of certifications.
Box 3: Suboptimal technical requirements, standards and certifications undermine EU
defence readiness
Past European collaborative programmes have been too often plagued by Member States’
tendency to
over-customise and over-use national requirements stemming from
national capability planning processes.
This has generally resulted in multiple versions
of the same capability, increasing R&D, procurement and maintenance costs, suboptimal
supply-chains use and generated delays, as well as reduced possibilities for common
training, logistics and other collaborative opportunities.
Whilst rigorous standardisation can help overcome such issues, there is ample evidence
that standards alone cannot fully avert interoperability and interchangeability issues.
Despite the Standardisation Agreements (STANAGs) adopted in the framework of NATO,
the
voluntary uptake of these standards remains an issue.
Another challenge stems
from the fact that currently agreed standards often do not sufficiently deliver the requisite
18
Established by the EDA Ministerial Steering Board in 2007.
10
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0012.png
real interoperability and interchangeability in operational terms since they do not cover all
defence systems, nor are they systematically detailed enough.
Finally,
certification also remains an issue to be addressed.
Certifications are currently
delivered by dedicated authorities at national level and not mutually recognised, often due
to safety protocols, which de facto fragments the market and hampers logistics.
Defence standards are a key enabler for the interoperability of the materiel and equipment
that armed forces use. The EU, notably through activities implemented by EDA, supports
the Member States in the identification of standardisation requirements and the use of
standards in the context of the collaborative projects, while using STANAGs as the main
reference.
Many EDF projects already support increased standardisation of equipment at EU level,
with a view to ensuring interoperability and interchangeability within any coalition. Thus,
the EDF requires Member States to define common functional requirements through the
call harmonisation process in which all Member States can participate. However, further
efforts should focus on incentivising the use of the most common existing standards in
armament production and procurement, building on, and complementing existing
initiatives. In particular, the EDA-managed European Defence STAndards Reference
system (EDSTAR), which identifies Best-Practices Standards (BPS) in support of
programmes, organisations and agencies, should constitute the basis for further work.
EDSTAR is complementary to the NATO STANAGs and aims at optimising effectiveness,
efficiency, and interoperability of standards application for defence and security products
and services. EU defence industrial programmes and tools should incentivise further and
prioritise projects that contribute to standardisation and harmonisation of requirements.
The Commission will therefore,
within its defence industrial programmes and in
particular in EDF,
promote the use of agreed civil
– in line with the EU standardisation
strategy
19
- or
defence standards such as NATO STANAGs.
Certification can be defined as the formal recognition that an equipment complies with the
applicable requirements guaranteeing that it can be used without significant hazard to
operators. In the defence sector, where equipment could significantly endanger the life of
operators, Member States ensure safeguards by mandating authorities (usually Agencies
within Ministries of Defence) to certify equipment before it can be used. A lack of mutual
recognition of certifications results into the impossibility to offer a product throughout a
certain market, even within the EU.
To address certification-related issues,
the Commission will also support swift cross-
certification activities,
including associated testing when necessary. Such a cross-
certification is already a reality, on a voluntary basis, within the airworthiness sector in the
framework of EDA. The Agency will also seek to further facilitate other certification,
testing and evaluation activities. In particular, reinforcing EDA’s work on defence testing
and evaluation would facilitate the coordination of testing activities aimed at ensuring
cross-certification of similar equipment across platforms.
In addition, under specific circumstances during crisis times, the Commission proposes to
allow mutual recognition of national certifications, under the provisions of the EDIP.
19
EU Standardisation Strategy, COM(2022) 31.
11
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2.2.3.
Towards robust cooperative full life cycle armament programmes: the Structure
for European Armament Programme as a new powerful tool
Cooperative armament programmes by Member States have been facing significant
challenges. They are being mostly set up on
ad hoc
basis and undermined by a lack of tools
commensurate to their complexity. This has often resulted in delays and cost overruns.
While the EDF and PESCO have offered incentives and frameworks to remedy this
situation, the commitment of the Member States towards cooperation throughout the whole
life cycle of defence capabilities needs to be further encouraged and powered up. To make
this happen,
the Commission will make available a new legal framework – the
Structure for European Armament Programme (SEAP)
– as a vehicle to underpin and
strengthen defence cooperation, including in the context of PESCO, if so agreed by
Member States.
Within this new legal framework, Member States will benefit from standardised
procedures for initiating and managing cooperative defence programmes. Subject to
specific conditions, Member States will be able to benefit from an increased funding rate
in the context of EDIP as well as simplified and harmonised procurement procedures.
Where Member States jointly own the procured equipment through the SEAP (acting as
an international organisation), they will be able to
benefit from a VAT exemption.
Moreover,
EDIP will provide for a bonus
for products developed and procured in the
context of a SEAP if the concerned Member States agree on a common approach to exports
for defence. In addition, the international organisation status will also allow Member
States, if they so wish, to issue debt-titles to ensure the long-term financing plan of
armament programmes. While the Union would not be liable for debt issuance by Member
States, contributions under EDIP to the functioning of SEAP might improve the conditions
for financing by the Member States of the armament programmes, which are eligible for
Union support.
This new tool will also help to intensify Member States’ cooperation efforts, in line with
the capability priorities commonly agreed by Member States within the framework of the
Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP), notably through the CDP. It should
facilitate and support the implementation of PESCO projects and contribute to the
fulfilment of the more binding commitments undertaken by participating Member States.
In the context of the ongoing PESCO Strategic Review, the High Representative could
recommend the participating Member States to strengthen the more binding commitments
related to the EDTIB and to consider possible new commitments, notably on joint
procurement from the EDTIB, in line with the ambition of the present strategy. These could
also be taken into account in the establishment and implementation of the PESCO projects.
As described in section 3 of this Joint Communication, the SEAP could also support the
development of prototypes stemming from collaborative R&D actions funded by the EDF
towards industrial production.
2.3. Investing European
Investing more, better, and together will increase the Union’s defence readiness only if the
increased investments resulting from larger national budgets benefit the Union’s defence
industry. Nevertheless, channelling Member States’ investments into the EDTIB is highly
dependent on the capacity of the latter to demonstrate its ability to meet the demand from
the Member States in both speed and volume.
12
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0014.png
The urgent acquisition decisions made by Member States in view of the dramatically
deteriorating security environment were undertaken against the backdrop of an EDTIB still
constrained by limited, peacetime-sized production capacity. The surge in acquisitions
benefited mostly non-EU industry. Availability in time and in volume is therefore a new
parameter of the competitiveness of EDTIB and of the security of the Union, especially
during periods of heightened security tensions.
The intensification of that trend has resulted in increasing existing dependencies or
generating new ones, thereby limiting the potential virtuous circle of increased investment
resulting in a strengthening of the EDTIB. The volume of acquisitions made through the
US Foreign Military Sales (FMS) in the EU has increased by 89% between 2021 and
2022
20
. Moreover, emerging armament manufacturers from other third countries have also
penetrated the EU market. This trend undermines the competitiveness of the EDTIB and
results in EU taxpayers’ money creating jobs abroad and must thus be reversed.
To that effect, the Commission, in cooperation with the High Representative/Head of the
Agency, aims at the creation of a
European Military Sales Mechanism,
facilitating the
availability of defence products from the EDTIB and increasing awareness of such
availability. The Commission proposes to test such a mechanism through a pilot project
within EDIP with a view to co-building with Member States and industry a fully-fledged
mechanism from 2028 onwards. The pilot mechanism will be organised in four pillars: 1)
a catalogue of defence products, 2) financial support for the creation of pools of defence
capabilities being quickly available, 3) provisions to ease procurement processes, and 4)
capacity building measures for procurement agents.
First, by building on existing tools
21
, the Commission, in cooperation with the High
Representative/Head of Agency, will work towards the establishment of a
single,
centralised, up to date catalogue of defence products
developed by the EDTIB. The
ammunition crisis in the context of the war in Ukraine revealed that the Union had at its
disposal an important production capacity, but the widespread underestimation of this
capacity resulted in increased attention on third countries producers. Such misperceptions
are prejudicial to the EDTIB and should be corrected. To increase the visibility of EU-
made solutions, the Commission, working closely with the High Representative/Head of
the Agency, will provide a single-entry point allowing for the identification of defence
products produced by the EDTIB. Such a catalogue will be fed voluntarily from industry,
through dedicated calls for expression of interest.
Second, the Commission will support the creation of
defence industrial readiness pools,
to increase availability and to speed up delivery time of EU-made defence products. By
producing in limited quantities for smaller national markets, our industry suffers from a
competitive disadvantage vis-à-vis non-EU players. While EU manufacturers have similar
or shorter delivery lead-time compared to non-EU manufacturers, the fact that non-EU
products can often be made readily available from within existing non-EU stocks results
in an increased speed to market, rendering these non-EU solutions more attractive. Within
EDIP, the Commission proposes to financially support the purchase of additional
quantities of defence capabilities for which Member States have decided to jointly procure
within the SEAP. This would allow the creation of strategic reserves that could quickly be
made available for additional customers resulting in an attractive Government-to-
Government scheme. The governance on the use of equipment in reserve will be
20
21
Center for International Policy, Security Assistance Monitor,
securityassistance.org.
Such as the EDA’s EUCLID database.
13
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0015.png
established by those Member States that are part of the Structures for European Armament
Programme.
Third, the Commission proposes to introduce a
standard regime applicable to future
defence contracts and framework agreements
with EU-based manufacturers. EU law
already allows Member States to open their contracts and framework agreements to other
Member States, when this possibility is foreseen from the outset of the procurement
procedure. However, Member States only very rarely use this possibility. As a
consequence, procurement through such contracts and framework agreements by other
Member States is very limited. To remedy this situation in a structural manner, this
standard regime would provide that, unless expressly otherwise stipulated,
a defence
contract/framework agreement could be opened
to any other Member State under the
same conditions as for the procuring Member State (subject to the agreement of the
Member States in question). Furthermore, based on the practice of Member States since
the beginning of the Russian full-scale war of aggression against Ukraine, it appears
necessary to allow Member States to also use existing national framework contracts with
EU-based manufacturers to procure additional quantities on behalf of others (lead nation
framework). Therefore, the Commission proposes, in the context of EDIP,
an extension
of the temporary derogation from Directive 2009/81/EC,
as provided within the ASAP
Regulation. By virtue of this ‘Industrial Solidarity Clause’, Member States would be able
to benefit from other Member States’ contracts, diminish their administrative burden (as
well as the industrial one), and obtain equipment with a reduced delivery lead time.
Fourth, to facilitate procurement from the EDTIB, Member States could request support
under existing EU instruments, such as the Technical Support Instrument (TSI)
22
for
administrative capacity building,
as well as for the
implementation of relevant
reforms.
Notably, Member States’ national procurement agencies could request support
for the simplification of procurement procedures, reorganisation of governance structures,
information exchanges, education and training, with the objective of improving joint
procurement in the Union. EDA will further support this administrative capacity building
by providing forums for sharing good practices and envisioning further cooperative actions
within the scope of its Defence Acquisition Expert network.
As in the case of collaborative procurement, it is essential that the Commission and the
High Representative/Head of the Agency are able to measure progress together with the
Member States, stemming from this strategy, thanks to data provided by Member States.
Increased investments in defence will achieve their purpose only through increased
cooperation, as the precondition to overcoming persistent inefficiencies. To achieve
resilience commensurate with threat level, Member States should tap the full opportunities
offered by the EDTIB by cooperating across the full range of investment and acquisition.
Two indicators can serve to measure progress deriving from the implementation of this
strategy.
First, between 2017 and 2023 the EU defence market has grown by 64% while defence
trade between Member States has only marginally increased and it now represents only
15% of the total value of the EU defence market
23
. This trend should be reversed. Member
22
Regulation 2021/240 of 10 February 2021 establishing a Technical Support Instrument, OJ L 57,
18.2.2021, p. 1–16.
Data from the EEAS annual reports and database on EU Member States’ Arms exports provides useful
information on the trends affecting the European defence market and industry. It allows to measure in
14
23
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0016.png
States are invited to ensure that,
by 2030, the value of intra-EU defence trade represents
at least 35% of the value of the EU defence market.
Moreover, recent data indicate that nearly 80% of Member States’ defence investments
since 2022 have been implemented with non-EU suppliers, against approximately 60%
before the war. Whilst possibly justified by reasons of urgency, this worrying inflexion can
be addressed by greater transparency and concrete progress availability and lead times of
products from the EDTIB.
In pursuit of the shared ambition embodied by this strategy, Member States should reverse
the current trend and gradually bring their procurement level from the EDTIB first to the
pre-war level, and increase it as far as possible beyond that point.
Member States are
invited to make steady progress towards procuring at least 50% of their defence
investments within the EU by 2030 and 60% by 2035
24
.
Reversing current trends and meeting those benchmarks would tangibly increase the
resilience of the Union and the security of our citizens. Additional support to European
cooperation brought by EDIP and EDF, as well as by successor programmes from 2028
onwards, combined with strong political will and commitment by Member States, make
those benchmarks realistic and achievable.
Way forward:
In order to help Member States invest more, better, together and European, The
Commission and High Representative/Head of the Agency:
will set up a new
joint programming and procurement function,
by creating a
Defence Industrial Readiness Board, as well a high-level European Defence
Industry Group with a consultative role.
The Commission:
proposes to
extend, within EDIP, the EDIRPA logic
of supporting cooperation
in procurement of products stemming from the EDTIB.
proposes to enable, within EDIP, a
rapid mutual recognition of certification,
during crisis times.
proposes to make available to Member States a new legal framework, the
Structure for
European Armament Programme (SEAP),
to strengthen defence
cooperation, in full complementarity with the PESCO framework.
particular the intensity of intra-EU trade flows, which provides indications on the intensity of both cross-
border procurement of final products and cross-border flows in the supply chains of the EDTIB. Indeed,
when it comes to defence procurement by Member States, data on products’ origin is not collected in a
centralised manner. Commission services, together with EEAS and EDA, will work with the Member
States to develop a methodology to measure the share of procurement from the EDTIB compared to the
one benefitting third countries entities.
24
Within the Defence Investment Gap Analysis Communication, the Commission indicated, based on a
scientific publication by D. Fiott (using import/export figures of the US State department) that between
2007 and 2016 over 60% of European defence procurement budget was spent on non-EU military
imports. As indicated in Box 1, during the period from the start of Russia’s war of aggression to June
2023, 78% of the defence acquisitions by EU Member States were made from outside the EU, US alone
representing 63% of this share.
15
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0017.png
proposes the gradual creation of a
European Military Sales Mechanism
aimed
at encouraging the availability of EU equipment in time and in volume.
proposes, through EDIP, the launch of
European Defence Projects of common
interest
to contribute – at EU level – to secure and protect the Union’s and
Member States’ free access to the contested areas such as cyber, space, air and
maritime, and to the implementation of the EU Capability Development
Priorities.
Furthermore, the High Representative:
will recommend the PESCO participating Member States, in the context of the
PESCO Strategic Review 2023-2025, to
strengthen the more binding
commitments in relation to the EDTIB
(or consider possible new ones), and
make use of PESCO projects to fulfil the ambition of the present strategy.
3.
S
ECURING AVAILABILITY
:
A RESPONSIVE
EDTIB
UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES AND
TIME HORIZON
The EU can already rely on an overall competitive, world-class EDTIB. But in a
dramatically changed geopolitical context where the EU and its Member States must take
responsibility for the security of their citizens, partnering with a more responsive and more
resilient EDTIB is more important than ever. This is about creating the conditions for the
EU’s industry to meet Member States’ demand in time and scale. While Member States
are responsible for placing firm and long-term orders ensuring the necessary market
predictability to defence industry, the Commission is ready to use its prerogatives and
relevant programmes to support this endeavour.
3.1. Supporting a more rapid response and versatile adaptation to urgent needs
As vividly illustrated in the wake of Russian military aggression against Ukraine, the
Union’s security and its ability to effectively support its partners depend on its capacity to
swiftly mobilise defence equipment. As the threat level is likely to remain high for the
foreseeable future, the EDTIB must be able to deliver what is needed, in the right quantities
And places, and at the right time. To achieve this, the EDTIB needs to undergo a paradigm
shift, and take more risks to be more responsive to the needs of all the Member States.
The mobilisation of the EDTIB should be done with a view to increase resilience and
security of supply across Europe, in full consideration of the specific needs of those
Member States objectively the most directly exposed to the risk of materialisation of
conventional military threats. This also requires addressing bottlenecks to the swift,
efficient and unimpeded movement of defence equipment and capabilities through further
investments in military mobility.
The EU will accompany this change of mindset and contribute to de-risking its defence
industry’s efforts, to enhance its readiness by supporting the ramp-up of production
capacity in the EU, in areas collectively identified by Member States and the Commission,
with a particular attention to SMEs and small Mid-Caps. To do so,
the Commission
proposes to expand the intervention logic of the ASAP programme,
beyond ground-
to-ground ammunition and missiles, for the EU to be able to accelerate productive
investments in the EDTIB for the products that are most needed. The EU financial support
should provide for an increased volume of production of relevant defence equipment, help
reduce their delivery lead-time and address potential bottlenecks and factors that could
delay or impede their supply and production. Insofar as possible, such financial support
16
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0018.png
should also encourage cross-border industrial partnerships and collaboration of relevant
companies in a joint industry effort, in full respect of relevant financial and competition
rules.
Nevertheless, supporting ramp-up also requires dealing with the industrial consequences
of a ramp-down once the surge in demand has been met. Investing now in the development
of ‘ever-warm’ facilities and the possible repurposing of civilian production
lines
would contribute to the security of the Union’s citizens, whilst preserving the flexibility of
EDTIB manufacturing capacity and preserving its overall competitiveness.
The Commission will contribute via EDIP to the building up of ‘ever-warm’ spare
industrial capacities that allow for the necessary flexibility to ramp up in response to urgent
spikes in demand. This would be particularly appropriate where critical supply shortages
were identified by Member States.
It will be possible to provide for the funding, for instance, of machine tools and relevant
personnel costs to ensure that in case of a major crisis the EDTIB can mass produce what
is needed in a short time frame, by having enhanced the availability of production
capacities, while modernising production technologies where possible. This will ensure
that an immediate ramp-up can take place in case of need.
The Commission will also explore with Member States measures to rapidly mobilise
production lines from civilian industry for defence production purposes, and to ensure that
the requisite qualified workforce is available under such scenarios (e.g. preparing staff in
terms of security clearance and training). These effective, practical solutions will enable
the EDTIB’s production to be ready to adapt without delay to a fluctuation in the demand
expressed by Member States.
Box 3. A case for greater responsiveness: achieving the mass production of defence
relevant drones against the backdrop of ongoing efforts to tap their potential
Unmanned systems are playing a decisive role in air, sea and land domains of the war
theatre in Ukraine, being widely used for reconnaissance and intelligence, fire support,
and also as effectors. Ukraine is estimated to use up to 10.000 aerial drones per month
on the battlefield while producing 40.000 new ones per month.
Most of them are low-cost consumables, often repurposed commercial civilian drones,
nonetheless capable of destroying far more costly equipment. Whilst they do not
diminish the use case of a broad range of special purpose military drones, they have
proven to be of considerable tactical and strategic value.
Whilst the EDF and its precursors have since 2017 been financially supporting defence
R&D actions in relation to unmanned systems, developing a capacity to swiftly ramp up
and achieve the
mass production of such equipment, can be identified as a key
element of EU defence readiness
vis-à-vis high intensity conflicts. This could be the
subject matter of actions under the future EDIP, and any critical dependency or
bottleneck should be identified and eliminated. Support to joint procurement of drones
or counter Unmanned Aerial Systems is also possible within EDIRPA.
Unmanned Aerial Systems also figure among the priority needs of Ukraine that could
be potentially supported via the European Peace Facility, in coordination with the work
undertaken in the context of the Ukraine Defence Contact Group capability coalitions.
17
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0019.png
The Commission adopted a
European drone strategy 2.0
on 29 November 2022, in the
context of which several flagship actions are being implemented. On top of funding for
relevant R&D actions under the Horizon Europe programme and the EDF, other actions
have been initiated: first, coordinated calls combining funding from EU instruments and
European Investment Bank (EIB) loans to support a new flagship project on ‘drone
technologies’; second, the development of a Strategic Drone Technology Roadmap to
identify priority areas to boost research and innovation, reduce existing strategic
dependencies and avoid the emergence of new ones, or the set-up of an EU network on
civil-defence drone testing centres to facilitate exchanges between civilian and defence
sector.
To further support the EDTIB’s versatility, the Commission is proposing, as part of the
proposed EDIP, the creation of a
Fund to Accelerate Defence Supply Chain
Transformation (FAST).
The fund will aim at
facilitating access to debt and/or equity
financing for SMEs and small midcaps
industrialising defence technologies and/or
manufacturing defence products or having imminent plans to enter those activities. FAST
could allow generating a multiple of the budget allocated to the initiative by EDIP in loans
or equity investments.
By leveraging additional public and private investments in support of the EDTIB, the
FAST will strengthen the resilience of the Union’s defence industry value chains. This
initiative should also contribute to support the development of an ecosystem of investors
focused on growth stages, investing in critical defence suppliers and supporting the
scaling-up of innovative defence companies.
3.2. Pursuing the technological forefront on defence
While securing the EU’s ability to respond in manufacturing terms to security urgencies,
it is equally important for Europe to remain at the cutting edge of innovation. A sustained
R&D effort is more necessary than ever to maintain the EDTIB competitiveness in the
longer term, notably in terms of its availability to tap the full potential of the excellence of
its scientists, engineers and innovators. In the short-term, achieving technological
breakthroughs would also support tackling current challenges, including the ongoing war
in Ukraine.
3.2.1.
Support innovation and realise the defence potential of SMEs
By encouraging and supporting more structured and systematic cooperation across the EU,
the EDF has paved the way towards a more innovative EDTIB, and towards the opening-
up and Europeanisation of supply chains. However, it is essential to further increase the
EU’s ambition to efficiently foster defence innovation and the emergence of new players
in the defence supply chains. The sector needs to take full advantage of faster civil
innovation cycles for technologies with dual-use potential to maintain its competitiveness
and ensure the military’s edge on the battlefield.
To remain competitive, the capacity and autonomy to develop innovative defence products
must also be underpinned by support for research into future-proof defence capabilities,
including in disruptive technologies. The latter can have a profoundly transformative effect
on Member States’ militaries and provide a critical operational advantage. To that effect,
the EU must seek to offer innovative undertakings ‒ especially start-ups, SMEs, small Mid-
Caps and Research and Technology Organisations (RTOs) ‒
more flexible, faster, and
18
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0020.png
leaner funding cycles and facilitate better connections with military end-users and
investors.
Against this background, the EU Defence Innovation Scheme (EUDIS), developed under
the EDF with a EUR 2 billion budget
25
, will propose within this MFF, innovation support
services for single entities, including through matchmaking with investors, partners and
end-users, and strengthen support for innovative product and technology testing and
validation. It will work to reduce red tape, especially for SMEs and small Mid-Caps, by
exploring for instance the introduction of
‘ever-warm’ calls
for projects and ways to
support promising technology transfer from civil to defence, where applicable.
The continuous and intense cooperation between the European Commission (EUDIS) and
EDA (Hub for EU Defence Innovation ‒ HEDI), allows defence innovators to take full
advantage of tailored EU support measures, including the guidance on the military end-
user capability requirements and opportunities to connect to European defence
communities. On an annual basis the EUDIS, in close cooperation with HEDI supports up
to 400 innovative start-ups and SMEs to help them break through traditional entry barriers.
The Commission services will support hackathons, after consultation with EDA (HEDI),
where young engineers and start-ups will come together and compete to find the best
solution to solve concrete battlefield issues, starting with challenges encountered on the
ground by Ukrainian armed forces. To further support the Ukrainian Defence
Technological and Industrial Base, a
EU Innovation Office in Kyiv
will act as a bridge
between EU start-ups and innovators and Ukrainian industry and Armed Forces. It will
help transmit technological breakthroughs that can have an impact on the battleground.
Box 4. SMEs: already at the core of the EU’s efforts in support of industrial defence
As agile players, SMEs play an ever more important role as providers of disruptive
technologies and innovation in the defence community. The Commission has therefore
taken action to support a more active contribution of SMEs to EU defence R&D, notably
by providing
dedicated EDF calls targeted at SMEs
whilst encouraging their
participation in all other projects. Cross-border cooperation involving SMEs is one of
the award criteria of the EDF programme, and financial bonuses apply based on the level
of involvement of SMEs for development actions.
As a result of the 2021 and 2022 EDF calls, 511 SMEs have been awarded EUR 354
million, representing respectively 40% of participants and 20% of the funding. In the
2023 EDF calls, the participation of SMEs represented around 50% of the total number
of entities, requesting 30% of total requested grant amount.
For the period 2023-2027
it is estimated that EDF should fund SMEs with up to EUR 840 million.
In 2022 the EDF allocated EUR 224 million to Defence Innovation and SME support
under EUDIS, including specific activities such as technological challenges. EUDIS
measures are further developed and implemented to support SMEs throughout their
growth cycle. A major milestone was reached in January 2024, with the launch of a
Defence Equity Facility to invest,
together with the European Investment Fund, part
of the EIB group,
up to EUR 500 million in promising defence SMEs to accompany
25
EUR 1.46 billion budget sourced from the EDF and EUR 500 million leveraged from other public and
private sources.
19
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0021.png
their growth.
In 2024 a defence accelerator is expected to be launched, and
matchmaking activities with investors will be organised.
3.2.2.
Help EDF projects become a tangible reality beyond the R&D phase
With more than EUR 1 billion per year over 2021-2027, the EDF is already a powerful
instrument to boost defence industrial cooperation and incentivize cross-border defence
research and development contributing to more European defence industrial value chains
26
.
However, beyond the research and early development phases, the collaborations reach a
‘commercialisation gap’ at the prototyping stage, where the required level of Member State
involvement becomes significantly higher.
Moreover, diverging operational requirements and national industrial policies might lead
defence companies to terminate cooperation once the EDF action ends. To avoid this,
defence cooperative actions initially supported by the EDF and having reached the
prototype stage, based on common, harmonised functional requirements, might need
sustained support towards industrialisation.
The Structures for European Armament Programme and the extension of the EDIRPA
logic will be instrumental to maximise the uptake of projects stemming from EDF. In
addition, EDIP will provide for
repayable grants for specific actions
linked with the
production and commercialisation of prototypes, in particular those stemming from EDF.
The successful bridging of the ‘commercialisation gap’ after the R&D phase of
collaborative projects also requires that the involved Member States agree when the
prototype stage is reached, on the conditions for export of the jointly developed products.
Considering the ongoing review of the EU Common Position 2008/944/CFSP on arms
export control, the Commission together with the High Representative renews the call
27
to
Member States to explore ways towards the streamlining and gradual further convergence
of their arms export control practices, especially for those defence capabilities that are
jointly developed. For the same purpose, Member States should also exchange best practice
on export control rules for jointly developed capabilities.
Furthermore, the Commission will take actions to facilitate the intra-EU transfers of
defence-related products in EU-funded projects and seek to simplify the management of
transfer licensing conditions and processes, in particular by introducing clauses on
transfers in the concerned Model Grant Agreement with the aim of limiting the recourse to
end-user certificates.
Several elements currently impede a correct and effective implementation of Directive
2009/43/EC, preventing the full exploitation of related benefits on the defence market. To
26
In three years, more than 145 projects involving 2618 participants have been launched, (
26
) forming the
backbone of the EU defence industrial ecosystem, which currently addresses a wide range of cutting-
edge defence capabilities and technologies. Cooperations involve research organisations (609
participations); SMEs (826 participations); larger entities (1113 participations), public bodies (456
participations) and higher education institutes (230 participations) that together constitute the EDTIB of
the future.
Communication on Commission contribution to European defence, COM(2022) 60 final.
20
27
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0022.png
better analyse existing challenges currently hindering its effective implementation, the
Commission will perform an
evaluation of the Directive by end 2025.
3.3. Ensuring Security of Supply at the EU level
Resilience is a precondition of the EDTIB readiness and competitiveness.
The EU has already developed tools and frameworks to increase industrial readiness and
resilience to tackle future crisis situations, including within the framework of EDA
28
.
However, such measures are either not available or applied only to a limited extent by
Member States to support the EDTIB.
An EU-wide Security of Supply regime will
therefore be put in place,
warranting greater resilience and, by the same token, offering
a competitive advantage for the EDTIB and EU defence supply chains. By providing a
level of security of supply that external competitors cannot offer, EU defence supply chains
could enjoy a ‘trust dividend’ from Member States.
3.3.1.
Greater security of supply to maximise the defence potential of the internal market
Within EDIP, the Commission proposes setting up a modular and gradual
EU Security of
Supply regime
to enhance solidarity and effectiveness in response to tensions along the
supply chains or security crises and allow for the timely identification of potential
bottlenecks. Different sets of measures are proposed to tackle two types of crises:
Supply crises, where shortages of civilian or dual-use components or of raw
materials
seriously threaten the timely availability and supply of defence
products.
In this case, after activation by the Council of a
“crisis state”,
a toolbox
will ensure the supply of the concerned components and/or raw materials for
defence supply chains, including, where necessary and justified by the overarching
public interest, by ensuring priority over some or all civilian supplies (priority
rated orders).
Supply crises
which are directly linked to the existence of a
security crisis
within
the Union or its neighbourhood. To face such scenarios, the Council should be given
the possibility to activate a
second, upper level of the crisis state to resort to
measures necessary and proportionate to the resolution of the crisis
(mostly
focusing on the supply of products specifically designed for military use).
To underpin the effective, efficient, and proportionate use of this two-layer crisis
framework, the Commission proposes to perform an
identification and monitoring of
critical products for certain defence supply chains,
to be identified together with
Member States in the frame of the Defence Industrial Readiness Board.
Building upon the framework currently available in other sectors, and on the EDA Key
Strategic Activities, this identification and monitoring will primarily rely on publicly
available information and, only where needed, on data provided by undertakings (subject
to Member States national security guarantees).
28
For instance, EU Member States adopted a Framework Arrangement on Security of Supply in 2013.
This framework was meant to be implemented through the establishment of codes of conduct or
implementing arrangement, and in 2014 a Code of Conduct on Prioritization was adopted by the EDA
Steering Board.
21
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0023.png
3.3.2.
Enabling and de-risking strategic stockpiling
To further de-risk security of supply for the EDTIB, as a long-term objective, the
Commission will consider
funding strategic stockpiling by industry of basic
components
such as electronic components and raw materials that are transversally used
in defence systems
29
. The creation of such stocks would allow for cost reduction, in case
large orders are placed, and permit to contain the price inflation resulting from the surge
in demand during a crisis.
As part of the EDIP, the Commission proposes a
small-scale preliminary pilot test,
by
allowing for the support to the creation of strategic stockpiling. Such a system will
complement the crisis time prioritisation mechanism, ensuring the latter will remain a last
resort option. Ongoing work on resilience and preparedness measures as part of the Action
Plan on Military Mobility 2.0, including through existing PESCO projects on military
mobility and a network of logistic hubs could also be considered in this regard.
3.3.3.
Identifying upfront and addressing the most strategic dependencies
Excessive dependencies on technologies that are critical for the defence sector hamper the
freedom of action of Member States’ Armed Forces and have a potential negative impact
on the competitiveness of the EDTIB, because of associated restrictions.
The Commission has already established the
EU Observatory of Critical Technologies
30
to identify dependencies and develop technology roadmaps to mitigate them. Its first
classified report has just been delivered to Member States. A scaling up of the Observatory
will allow a faster identification of dependencies, monitoring of supply chains and will
create an overview of criticalities. Work to date has been started with a subset of Electrical,
Electronic and Electro-mechanical (EEE) semiconductor-based components and
autonomous systems technologies.
In parallel, cross-fertilisation between work programmes of other Union instruments, such
as the EDF and Chips for Europe programme, will be sought, to mitigate dependencies
identified and ensure that the EDTIB has at its disposal defence industrial enabling
technology and products such as trusted chips, supporting its readiness.
The Commission also supports EU Member States, in particular their regional and local
authorities, through the Technical Support Instrument
31
, providing tailor-made technical
support to design and implement reforms for advancing economic and technology security,
competitiveness and bolstering the resilience of supply chains in the Member States.
Way forward:
To secure availability based on a more responsive EDTIB across all time horizons, the
Commission:
proposes to
expand, within EDIP, the ASAP intervention logic,
beyond
ammunition and missiles, and to complement it with the development of ‘ever-
warm’ facilities
and possible
repurposing of civilian production lines.
29
In this regard, the Commission will consider the possibility to rely on tools developed under the Critical
Raw Materials Act [COM(2023) 160].
Roadmap on critical technologies for security and defence, Strasbourg, 15.2.2022 COM(2022) 61 final.
https://commission.europa.eu/funding-tenders/find-funding/eu-funding-programmes/technical-support-
instrument/technical-support-instrument-tsi_en
22
30
31
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0024.png
will, together with the High Representative and Member States, design a policy
proposal to
support the production of drones
within the EU or possibly jointly
with Ukraine by mobilising relevant instruments.
proposes, within EDIP, the creation of a
Fund to Accelerate Defence Supply
Chain Transformation (FAST).
This new financial instrument will support
SMEs via debt and/or equity financing.
will provide
sustained support towards industrialisation
of defence
cooperative actions initially supported by EDF, through repayable grants under
the framework of EDIP.
proposes the establishment of a modular and gradual
EU Security of Supply
regime
to enhance solidarity and effectiveness in response to tensions along the
supply chains or security crises and allow for the timely identification of
potential bottlenecks.
The EU:
will open an
Innovation Office in Kyiv
to ensure matchmaking between the
Union’s start-ups and innovators and Ukraine’s industry and armed forces.
4.
F
INANCING THE
U
NION
S AMBITION FOR DEFENCE INDUSTRIAL READINESS
In order for this strategy to succeed in its aim to implement a new ambition for defence
industrial readiness at EU level, it should be accompanied by a bold increase of funding,
commensurate with the challenge we are facing.
The proposal for a Regulation establishing EDIP alongside this strategy includes
a budget
of EUR 1.5 billion
for investment in the defence industrial readiness of the EDTIB.
This should be complemented by additional amounts for the development of the Ukrainian
DTIB and its closer integration with the EDTIB and the Union defence equipment market.
Also, the immediate defence exigencies of Ukraine call for additional financing for the
procurement of military material in support of the exercise of its right of self-defence. If
the Council were to adopt a CFSP decision under Article 29 of the Treaty on European
Union (TEU) upon a proposal by the High Representative to transfer to the Union
extraordinary cash balances of central securities depositories arising from the unexpected
and extraordinary revenues from Russia’s immobilised sovereign assets, such additional
support could be drawn from these revenues, in line with the objectives of the Union’s
CFSP. In case these additional resources were to become available, they could potentially
increase the European Peace Facility’s financial capacity for the procurement of military
equipment in support of Ukraine, or any other Union instrument.
In other words, this
would entail using the windfall profits of frozen Russian assets to jointly purchase
military equipment for Ukraine.
As and when the immediate defence needs of Ukraine permit, certain amounts could also
be drawn from such extraordinary cash balances for the purposes of the medium- and long-
term development of the Ukrainian DTIB, benefiting from the provisions set out in the
proposal for a Regulation establishing EDIP, as well as for Ukraine’s general budgetary
needs for recovery and reconstruction.
This budget, given the scale of the effort needed to ensure the defence industrial readiness
across the Union, has to be considered as a bridge – limited in scale - towards the next
Multi-Annual Financial Framework. Given that the security challenges faced by Europe
23
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0025.png
are likely to remain, it is important that the
next MFF includes an ambitious financial
envelope on defence
with relevant budgets for the successors of both EDF and EDIP for
the period from 2028 onwards.
This Strategy calls for a renewed ambition in the current MFF via the EDIP, and a
strengthened budget in support of defence industries for the next MFF. Still, given the
change of the security paradigm resulting from the steep increase of regional and global
threats, representing potentially existential security challenges for the Union and its
Member States, and the fact that the next MFF will only begin in 2028, it is necessary to
launch a discussion on quantifying the EU’s financing needs for defence industrial
readiness which would be commensurate with this change of the security paradigm, and
on how to ensure such adequate financing. This calls for a joint exploration with Member
States, in a short time-frame, to assess needs and options to boost through available
instruments, such as a financially reinforced EDIP and EPF, large-scale joint defence
procurements for Ukraine and for Member States, massive and faster industrial ramp-up
of the EU defence industrial base and the launch of defence flagship projects to protect
unimpeded access to the EU’s contested areas.
5.
M
AINSTREAMING
POLICIES
A DEFENCE READINESS CULTURE
,
INCLUDING ACROSS
EU
The
European defence industry is a crucial contributor to resilience, security, and
social sustainability.
There will be no economic prosperity without peace on the
continent, and the EDTIB role in this respect needs to be fully acknowledged in the Union’s
regulatory environment and policies. The EDTIB also forms a single and critical aerospace
and defence ecosystem, whose key actors are also contributors to technologies that are at
the core of the green transition.
It is therefore crucial to make sure that the EDTIB enjoys a level of access to finance that
is commensurate to the level of investments needed, operates in the adequate regulatory
environment and is sufficiently attractive for the young generations and the most talented.
5.1. Facilitating access to finance
Ensuring sufficient access to finance and leveraging public investment for the EU defence
sector is vital given the compelling need to boost investment in this ecosystem. Therefore,
it is indispensable to involve the financial sector. To achieve this, the Commission and the
High Representative/Head of the Agency, where relevant, will work with Member States,
industry and the financial sector to improve the EDTIB access to both private and public
finance.
5.1.1.
Access to private finance
The EDTIB faces persistent barriers in accessing finance, in particular private finance.
According to a recent Commission study
32
, SMEs operating within the defence sector face
higher barriers to accessing finance compared to companies active in other sectors. During
2021-2022, two thirds of the consulted companies refrained from seeking equity financing
32
“Access to equity financing for European defence SMEs” https://defence-industry-
space.ec.europa.eu/study-results-access-equity-financing-european-defence-smes-2024-01-11_en
24
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0026.png
and close to 50% refrained from seeking debt financing, a stark contrast to the 6.6%
average among SMEs in the EU during the same period.
With a view to boosting the sector’s access to financing, the Commission and EDA
together with Member States will take the initiative to reach out to banks and investors for
a
high-level dialogue
to discuss their intensified participation, identify difficulties and find
ways to stimulate private sector engagement to support defence investments.
Financial actors’ willingness to engage with the defence industry appears to be affected by
specificities of the defence market (including complexity of procurement or the difficulties
for them to assess the exact implications of existing international conventions on arms) or
to assumptions around Environmental Social Governance (ESG) factors.
Under the EU sustainable finance framework,
no EU rule, or any EU planned rule,
impedes private investment in the defence industry.
The Commission services, together
with ESMA as appropriate, will provide guidance on the application of the EU sustainable
finance framework in the area of defence. In close cooperation with EDA, the Commission
will enhance the dialogue between the defence and financial sectors and contribute to
support industry in increasing transparency. The Commission will also work towards a
better recognition of the EU’s sovereignty, resilience and security, in particular within the
EU sustainable finance framework. The Governmental Expert Network on ESG, managed
by the EDA, is one example of a platform where such mutual understanding and trust could
be further developed. In particular, this forum should strengthen the interface between
Member States’ Ministries of Defence and the financial sector.
This would allow for concrete actions to mitigate the defence industry’s current challenges
relating to access to finance, as synergies between institutional actors and private actors on
capital markets have been identified as critical in this regard.
Box 5: Defence industry and the EU sustainable finance framework
The Union defence industry is a crucial contributor to the resilience and the security of the
Union, and therefore to peace and social sustainability. Against this backdrop, the EU
sustainable finance framework
is fully consistent with the Union’s efforts to facilitate
the European defence industry’s sufficient access to finance and investment. It
does not
impose any limitations ono the financing of the defence sector.
EU rules on sustainability disclosures and preferences apply horizontally across all
industries and do not single out any sector. The Commission has not issued any kind of
‘social Taxonomy’ so far and there are no plans to do so. With the exception of weapons
subject to prohibitions by international conventions signed by Member States - which are
therefore deemed by the EU to be incompatible with social sustainability -
the defence
industry enhances sustainability,
given its contribution to resilience, security and peace.
Similarly, the fact that specific defence industrial activities have so far not been included
in the EU’s Environmental Taxonomy,
does not prejudge defence industries’
environmental performance and should therefore not affect their access to finance.
5.1.2.
Taking full benefit of existing horizontal EU financial instruments
The EDTIB can already, in principle, benefit from existing EU financial instruments,
implemented via InvestEU. Nevertheless, the current lending policies of the European
financial actors implementing InvestEU, including the EIB Group and National
25
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0027.png
Promotional Banks and Institutions, and of International Financial Institutions, represent a
major hurdle in the deployment of such financial instruments,
beyond the potential
financing of dual-use technologies, in support of the sector.
This is illustrated by the inability to implement the ASAP ‘Ramp-up Fund’.
Modifying
their lending policies, in particular that of the EIB Group, is thus necessary and a
major priority
to ensure that the defence sector
has access to and can fully benefit from
EU financial instruments.
Such a modification will also have positive cascading effects,
by giving a significant positive signal to the financial market and private banks.
In addition, the EU needs to maximise opportunities offered by synergies and
complementarities between financing instruments and grants. The future MFF should, in
that respect, seek to further optimise synergies between EU instruments, as mentioned in
the Commission White Paper on options to boost investment in R&D of technologies with
dual use potential
33
. The public consultation on the White Paper being currently ongoing,
the content of this strategy is without prejudice to future Commission actions in this area.
Under the current set-up it is already possible for defence to tap into faster civil innovation
cycles where applicable, and vice-versa, bearing in mind that some technologies used in
defence platforms have dual-use potential.
The Commission and the High Representative/Head of the Agency invite the EIB
Group’s governing bodies and in particular the EIB Board to
adapt defence-related
exclusions from the EIB Group’s Lending Policies,
in line with EU policy priorities and
applicable law. This would allow the EIB to support production of military equipment and
more generally the European defence industry, as recently also called for by the European
Parliament
34
. An agreement on a common definition of ‘technologies with dual-use
potential’ between the Commission and the EIB Group, building on the Strategic European
Security Initiative and the Defence Equity Facility, could contribute to promote joint
investments in technologies, products and infrastructure with a dual-use potential.
However, such a step, while welcome,
would not be sufficient.
The EIB, by its mandate
stemming from Article 309 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,
shall contribute to the balanced and steady development of the internal market in the
interest of the Union. The defence industry is an integral part of the internal market. To
meet the financing needs of the sector and enable the full mobilisation of EU funding
programmes, including InvestEU, in support of defence readiness, the
EIB should take
all necessary steps
35
to review its lending policy this year and to adapt it in line with
current policy priorities and objective needs.
The public financial actors of the Member
States are invited to do likewise.
33
The European Commission, White Paper on options for enhancing support for research and development
involving technologies with dual-use potential, Brussels, 24.1.2024 COM(2024) 27 final.
See European Parliament resolution of 28 February 2024 on the financial activities of the European
Investment Bank - annual report 2023 (2023/2229(INI)). The report particular “calls on the EIB to
enhance its support to the Strategic European Security Initiative and to the European defence industry,
including SMEs, in particular to contribute to continued support for Ukraine; calls on the EIB to reform
its eligibility list so that ammunition and military equipment that go beyond dual-use application are no
longer excluded from EIB financing”.
E.g. any necessary preparatory steps, such as market analyses.
26
34
35
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0028.png
5.1.3.
Full integration of defence and security as a strategic objective of relevant Union
funding and programmes
The
EDTIB should fully benefit from Union funding
designed for technological and
industrial development, including under
Cohesion Policy Funds,
notably the ERDF
36
,
ESF+
37
(e.g. on skills), Cohesion Fund (e.g. for transport) and
InvestEU,
provided this is
in line with the respective programme and policy objectives. While the defence industry is
already eligible under these instruments, Member States should consider a stronger
steering of those EU funds that are under shared management towards the sector, where
this supports regional development and competitiveness, to mirror its prominent role as a
priority of the Union and a crucial contributor to the Union’s stability and security.
In this respect, the Commission will consider including or maintaining
defence readiness,
security and resilience as an explicit strategic objective under future relevant EU
programmes
to ensure that they support fully the EDTIB, and that the implementing
partners and intermediaries (in the case of indirect management) face no obstacles in
pursuing those objectives.
5.2. Ensuring that the EDTIB operates in an adequate regulatory environment
The EDTIB should be able to operate in an adequate regulatory environment. To do so,
defence considerations need to be mainstreamed in EU policies.
Possible negative
impacts on the EDTIB of Union’s initiatives should be identified and mitigated as early as
possible. The Commission will therefore
include in its initiatives defence industrial
readiness considerations,
on a more systematic basis and where relevant. Moreover, the
Commission in cooperation with the High Representative/Head of the Agency will
continue to liaise with the Member States and the EDTIB on these issues, by building on
existing initiatives facilitated by the EDA in areas such as Regulation (EC) No 1907/2006
on Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals (REACH)
38
and
the Single European Sky (SES) initiative.
The evolving security situation also requires the Commission to reflect on reducing
administrative lead times, while ensuring the necessary degree of sound financial
management. The 2024 revision of the Financial Regulation will allow the Union to take
the necessary steps under emergency conditions to support defence industrial readiness.
5.3. Improving the attractiveness of the defence sector for the young generations and
the most talented
Investing in people and their skills is key to keeping abreast of emerging technologies and
to attracting and retaining talent in the sector. The EU is supporting Member States and
facilitating partnerships to work together on understanding the current and future skills
needs of the sector (e.g. through the European Pact for Skills).
The prevailing labour and skills shortages in the defence industry have their roots in the
previous underinvestment in new defence programmes and the lack of attractiveness of the
sector, as well as restricted work force mobility and its ageing. While understanding and
mitigating the negative perceptions of the defence industry is key to improving the sector’s
36
37
38
European Regional Development Fund.
European Social Fund Plus
Including continued cooperation with the European Chemicals Agency.
27
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0029.png
attractiveness, also for a diverse workforce, further actions are needed by all stakeholders
to be fully able to tap into the Union’s human resource potential, including overcoming
gender-based stereotypes. To this end, the Commission’s forthcoming Action Plan to
address labour and skills shortages in the EU will aim at removing the bottlenecks for
sustainable growth that these shortages have contributed to create in many sectors, thereby
enabling the EU’s future long-term competitiveness while upholding quality jobs and a
workforce that is equipped with the right skills.
The Commission and the High Representative/Head of the Agency will, in addition to
mainstreaming defence,
explore actions with the aim of improving workforce mobility
and supporting defence-related education,
notably through the opportunities provided
by the EU defence industrial programmes, and cooperation between education providers,
including the European Security and Defence College.
5.4. Helping the EDTIB to contribute to the green transition
To contribute to the green transition and strengthen its resilience and cost-efficiency, the
EDTIB must continue its efforts to make its production and products more sustainable,
reducing carbon emissions and increasing circularity in line with EU policies and
ambitions. The Joint Communication on a New Outlook on the Climate and Security Nexus
recognises the importance of the defence industry for the climate adaptation and mitigation
efforts of Member States’ Armed Forces. There are further opportunities to explore
synergies and possible areas of cooperation between Member States, industry and EU
services, including with regard to innovation, analytics and standardisation for new
renewable energy sources used by the military as well as wider commercial sector.
Ensuring an appropriate visibility and recognition of efforts made by the defence sector
towards environmental sustainability could also contribute to its overall societal
acceptance.
The Commission and the High Representative/Head of the Agency
will continue to
support the EDTIB’s efforts towards green transition,
e.g. through the actions proposed
in the Joint Communication on the Climate and Security Nexus, including Green
Procurement.
Way forward:
In order to mainstream a European defence readiness culture, the Commission, working
with the High Representative/Head of the Agency:
invites
EIB Group’s governing bodies to review this year the EIB Group’s
Lending Policies,
and to adapt the current
defence-related exclusions,
in line with
EU policy priorities and applicable law.
will
enhance the dialogue between the defence and financial sectors,
and provide
guidance on the application of the EU sustainable finance framework.
Furthermore, the Commission:
will
encourage increased support to security, resilience and defence readiness
through Union funding programmes.
This objective will be also considered in the
preparation of future EU programmes.
6.
A
CHIEVING READINESS AND RESILIENCE THROUGH PARTNERSHIPS
The ambition of the EU to swiftly achieve defence readiness should also be leveraged
through partnerships, including notably with Ukraine, as well as through enhanced
28
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
cooperation with NATO, strategic partners and like-minded partners – European, trans-
atlantic and beyond - and other international organisations
6.1. Developing ever closer ties with Ukraine
Ukraine is and will increasingly be a crucial partner of the Union in the defence industrial
sector. Faced with a high intensity war of aggression, the Ukrainian DTIB had to shift to a
war economy model. It will emerge as one of the engines of the economic recovery of the
country at the end of the war and a testbed of defence industrial readiness. A closer
cooperation between the EU and the Ukrainian defence industrial sectors will be part of
the EU’s future security commitments to Ukraine. The Ukrainian DTIB and the EDTIB
could therefore mutually benefit from enhanced cooperation.
The Commission and the High Representative/Head of the Agency will take forward the
following measures.
Participation in Union programme in support of defence industry:
-
To strengthen ties between EDTIB and Ukraine’s DTIB, the EDIP will provide the
possibility for Ukraine to participate in joint procurement and to Ukrainian defence
companies to be supported in their industrial ramp-up and cooperation with the
EDTIB.
Stimulating cooperation between the Ukrainian DTIB and the EDTIB:
-
The EDA will make full use of its existing Administrative Arrangement with
Ukraine, and together with Member States explore a possible revision of its scope
as soon as conditions allow.
The Commission services, the EDA and the EEAS will foster dedicated
information exchange on standards and on respective lessons learned.
In the context of the proposed Ukraine Assistance Fund within the European Peace
Facility the EEAS will explore options to further incentivise cooperation between
EU and Ukrainian defence industries.
The EU will host an EU-Ukraine Defence Industry Forum in 2024, to bolster
cooperation between Ukrainian and EU defence industries.
-
-
-
Further support to Ukraine through the EDTIB:
-
Through joint procurement from the EDTIB of the military equipment delivered in
the framework of the proposed Ukraine Assistance Fund within the European Peace
Facility, the EU defence industry will benefit from more predictability on the
priority needs of Ukraine
Subject to decision by the Council, further support for procurement of military
equipment for Ukraine could be done via the European Peace Facility, drawing
from the extraordinary cash balances of central securities depositories arising from
the unexpected and extraordinary revenues from Russia’s immobilised sovereign
assets.
The EEAS, the EDA and the Commission services will continue to regularly update
the Ukraine Defence Contact Group and promote the capacity of the EDTIB to
further support Ukrainian needs, including in the context of the capability
coalitions.
-
-
29
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0031.png
6.2. NATO
In line with the three Joint Declarations on EU-NATO cooperation
39
, enhanced staff-to-
staff talks, including the possibility of a dedicated structured dialogue with NATO, could
cover more prominently defence industry-related activities and topics of mutual interest,
including on circular economy, interoperability, industry aspects of climate change,
interoperability, standardisation cross-certification, and responses to new and emerging
threats. This will require increased information sharing, including classified information,
between NATO Staff, on the one hand, and relevant Commission services, the EEAS and
EDA on the other hand. Both organisations should continue to exchange views and explore
synergies and complementarity of efforts in the realm of supply chain security essential to
capability development and delivery.
The EU will also explore the potential for further strengthening cooperation between the
EEAS, EDA, NATO International Staff and the NATO Support and Procurement Agency
(NSPA), as well as between the Defence Innovation Accelerator for the North Atlantic
(DIANA), the EDA HEDI and EUDIS on innovation.
6.3. Teaming-up with strategic and international partners to achieve defence
readiness
The internationalisation of supply chains means that it is virtually impossible to maintain
an end-to-end control on raw materials and thousands of components of a complex system.
Strengthening mutually beneficial partnerships with strategic partners, international
organisations, and like-minded third countries, including through security and defence
dialogues, can amplify the Union’s efforts towards defence industrial readiness. This
cooperation will be flexible. It will vary in form, scope and types of participants in function
of shared interests. Such a cooperation should contribute to further secure supply chains,
reinforce the EDTIB and reduce EU’s strategic dependencies, without creating new (or
perpetuating existing) ones.
In addition, the EDA will continue to make best use of its existing administrative
arrangements, in line with the principles for cooperation with third parties agreed by
Member States.
Way forward:
The Commission and the High Representative /Head of the Agency, will:
explore measures to enhance the participation of Ukraine in the Union’s
programmes in support of defence industry, including under EDIP,
the possibility
for Ukraine to participate in joint procurement,
support the industrial ramp-up
in Ukraine and enhance cooperation between the EDTIB and the Ukrainian defence
industry;
in the context of the
Ukraine Assistance Fund
proposed by the High
Representative, ensure further EU military support to Ukraine, notably through
sending demand signals to the European defence industry to increase production
capacity with a view to sustaining Ukraine’s war effort in the long-term as well as
incentivising cooperation between European and Ukrainian defence industries
enhance
staff-to-staff structured dialogue with NATO
on topics of mutual
interest.
39
EU-NATO Joint Declaration (8 July 2016); EU-NATO Joint Declaration (10 July 2018); EU-NATO
Joint Declaration (10 January 2023).
30
FOU, Alm.del - 2023-24 - Bilag 96: EU kommissionens forsvarsindustrielle strategi
2837229_0032.png
host
an EU-Ukraine Defence Industry Forum in 2024
to bolster cooperation
between Ukrainian and EU defence industries.
C
ONCLUSION
For decades the Union’s citizens have enjoyed an unprecedented period of peace.
However, Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine, as well as the rising tensions at EU’s
doorsteps, call for the EU and its Member States to take up
strategic responsibility and
power up the EU defence industry
to address the unprecedented security threats and
challenges they are facing.
A technological cutting edge and capacity to steadily guarantee the availability of any
defence equipment are prerequisites to the ability of the Union to guarantee the
effectiveness of its Member States’s armed forces and thereby to preserve peace on the
continent. This strategy proposes ambitious measures to foster and support the EDTIB’s
transformation over the coming decade.
By expanding and complementing existing EU defence industrial policy tools and by
outlining the political, industrial, and budgetary ambition to be mobilised in support to the
EDTIB, the latter will be empowered to leverage the efficiency gains of a more genuinely
integrated defence market and to unleash the untapped potential of scale effects.
The implementation of the strategy will help the European defence industry to be
more responsive to urgent needs without sacrificing the future.
From earlier and more
cooperative investment planning to greater support to industrialisation and joint
acquisition; from a more effective incorporation of innovation to greater continuity in the
efforts deployed to develop high end capabilities and strategic enablers; from stronger
security of supply to greater freedom of action,
this strategy will serve as a catalyst of
what it takes to restore and preserve peace in the European continent.
The adaptation of the Union’s defence industry to the current security and market trends
has to be addressed as a matter of priority. The European Commission and the High
Representative / Head of the Agency are ready to support Member States in this endeavour.
31