The Dutch €248 Million Drone Package and the Industrialisation of the “Build with Ukraine” Model
From military support to cross-border industrial co-production
Since 2022, most European support for Ukraine has remained structurally identifiable as equipment transfer, battlefield procurement, financial assistance, or domestically anchored production for Ukrainian use. The Dutch €248 million drone package announced on 15 April 2026 appears to mark a more consequential shift. The issue is not simply the size of the package, nor the fact that drones remain central to Ukraine’s battlefield requirements. The issue is whether public funding is now being used to support a bilateral industrial structure in which Ukrainian design, wartime adaptation, licensing, technology transfer, and production capacity in an EU Member State begin to operate within one programme architecture. If that is what the Dutch case represents, then it has significance well beyond the immediate package itself.
The report is structured to separate four analytical levels that must not be conflated. It begins by reconstructing the documented sequence from the December 2025 bilateral production agreement to the April 2026 package, the Joint Declaration, the licensing agreement, and the first named industrial case involving VDL Defentec and GreentechHarvest. It then examines whether this sequence amounts to a genuine “build with Ukraine” industrial model rather than a modified aid format, before analysing the nature of the €248 million package, the industrial actors already visible, and the extent to which the Dutch case is distinguishable from other European approaches. The later sections assess its compatibility with the direction of EU defence-industrial policy, its implications for defence-tech investment and transaction activity, and the frictions that could limit replication. The report closes with a narrow final judgment based strictly on what official public evidence clearly establishes and what still remains only a plausible pathway.

