Politics

Britain’s Defence Industry Renaissance: £10bn in New Orders and Growing

From drone technology to naval vessels, UK defence manufacturing is experiencing its strongest period in thirty years.
National Herald UK
Politics Desk
Politics Published April 9, 2026 · 6:06 PM Updated June 25, 2026 · 7:34 PM 1 min read
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The war in Ukraine changed everything for European defence. For British manufacturers, it has created a demand environment unlike anything seen since the Cold War.

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The Order Book

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BAE Systems reported its largest ever forward order book last quarter. The figure — over £37 billion — reflects not just UK government contracts but a surge in export orders from NATO allies who are urgently rebuilding depleted stockpiles.

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Babcock, QinetiQ, and Rolls-Royce Defence are all reporting similar dynamics. The naval sector, in particular, is stretched: the capacity to build and maintain surface vessels is fully committed for the better part of a decade.

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The Skills Question

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Defence manufacturing's challenge is not demand. It is supply — specifically, the supply of skilled workers. Welders, systems engineers, and programme managers cannot be trained in months.

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The sector's traditional apprenticeship model is being expanded, with several major employers announcing multi-year investments in training infrastructure. Universities with engineering faculties are being approached about new defence-focused courses.

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Geopolitical Context

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The UK's defence industrial base has always been shaped by alliances. AUKUS — the trilateral security pact with Australia and the United States — is generating submarine-related work that will sustain significant employment in Barrow-in-Furness for decades.

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