EU Pushes Five Joint Defence Projects to Boost Industry

European Commission

Today, the European Commission proposed five new large-scale projects, known as the European Defence Projects of Common Interest (EDPCIs) , to help EU countries strengthen their defence capabilities by developing key military systems together.

The industrial projects focus on five priority areas: drones and counter-drone systems; maritime and seabed defence; space; air and missile defence; as well as strengthening security along the EU's Eastern Flank. They come in response to a Commission call for expression of interest to Member States to submit project proposals for possible EDPCIs.

Under the €1.5 billion  European Defence Industry Programme (EDIP), the Commission has allocated €325 million to support the establishment and deployment of the EDPCIs, as set out in the work programme published on 30 March 2026.

The new projects provide a framework for EU countries to work together on major defence initiatives that are too large or too complex for individual countries to develop on their own. By supporting long-term cooperation, they aim to strengthen Europe's defence industry and improve the EU's ability to respond to shared security challenges, in line with NATO capability priorities.

On average, 18 Member States participate in each project and Ukraine participates in four of the five projects. The Commission is expected to take part in the EDPCIs, provide financial support and continue supporting Member States coordinate their implementation. It will also monitor progress against agreed milestones to support the timely delivery of the EDPCIs projects.

Next steps

The Council will now discuss on the formal establishment of the EDPCIs, identifying their objectives and characteristics, the participating countries, and the estimated investment expected to be generated by the EDPCI.

After the Council adopts of the list of identified EDPCIs, those will become eligible to receive EU funding through the European Defence Industry Programme (EDIP) in accordance with a dedicated procedure. Their funding will enable the projects' initial deployment and lay the foundation for possible further funding via the upcoming European Competitiveness Fund.

Background

The EDIP Regulation was adopted on 16 December 2025. This instrument aims to strengthen and modernise Europe's defence industry, secure the availability of cutting-edge technology, ramp-up production capacity, support common procurement and also resilience via that steady supply of military equipment to the armed forces of the Member States and the reinforcement of the supply chains.

The Regulation introduces the establishment of EDPCIs as future ambitious collaborative industrial projects aimed to benefit a broader part of the EU and open also to Norway and Ukraine.

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