
Hackathon teams race to solve defense tech challenges as Europe boosts military capabilities
SANDHURST, England (AP) — Hunched over laptops, the team of four raced to solve a challenge: how to get a set of drones to fly themselves from one place to another when GPS and other signals are jammed by an enemy.
Elsewhere around the hall, groups of people — engineering students, tech workers and hobbyists — gathered around long tables to brainstorm, write computer code or tinker with more drones and other hardware.
Most of them were strangers when they first gathered last month at Britain's Sandhurst Military Academy to compete in a 24-hour 'hackathon' focused on defense technology. Many were drawn to the event because they wanted to use their technical skills to work on one of the biggest challenges confronting Europe: the continent's race to beef up its military capabilities as Russia's war in Ukraine threatens to widen global instability.
'Given the geopolitical climate, defense tech is relevant now more than ever,' said Aniketh Ramesh, a startup founder with a Ph.D. in robotics in extreme environments and one of the drone team members. The hackathon, he said, 'is a good place to sort of go and contribute your ideas.'
'Robotics and drones are having their iPhone moment' because costs have come down and the hardware is widely available, Ramesh said. That means building drones to do new things is more a 'thinking challenge' than a technical one, he said.
Ramesh already knew one teammate, a former British army paratrooper, from a previous event. They recruited two others — one engineer and one with a Ph.D. in computer vision — through the event's group chat on Signal.
The drone problem was just one of the many challenges the teams could choose to solve. The tasks were proposed by defense tech companies like German drone maker Helsing, robotics company Arx, the British military and Kyiv-based venture capital firm D3.
Some worked on software, such as an algorithm to predict which way a target would move. Others came with their own ideas. One team made a plastic cup packed with sensors that could be produced in large amounts to be scattered across a battlefield. Another team built a scale model of an autonomous medical evacuation aircraft.
Similar competitions have been held regularly across Europe since last year, inspired by the Ukrainian military's on-the-fly wartime innovations to fend off the larger Russian army.
The grassroots meetups are part of a wider network of defense innovation that organizers hope to foster in Europe, underscoring the continent's scramble to churn out weapons that have been turbocharged by U.S. President Donald Trump's persistent threats to withdraw from the NATO trans-Atlantic security alliance.
The idea is to 'go build a prototype, take your prototype to become a product, and go build a company' so that you can 'deliver stuff to the frontline and hopefully save someone's life,' said Benjamin Wolba, who organizes a separate but similar series, the European Defense Tech Hackathon.
Wolba's group has held tournaments in about 10 cities in the past twelve months, including one in Lviv, Ukraine, in May, and has scheduled more this year in Sheffield, England; Gothenburg, Sweden; Marseilles, France; London; and Berlin.
The European Union-backed EUDIS Defence Hackathon holds simultaneous competitions at eight universities twice a year. Meanwhile, NATO has launched DIANA, an 'accelerator' program to speed up defense innovations.
The competitions are producing real-world results. The winners of one European Defense Tech Hackathon were a team of Bulgarian high school students who came up with a de-mining solution that they used to found a startup.
At last year's London event, the winning team devised an idea for an anti-drone system. They went to Ukraine for more testing, and then were bought by a startup that went on to raise millions in venture capital funding, said Pass.
This year, instead of a trophy, some London teams signed term sheets with investors.
Hackathons have their origins in the software industry. Small teams of programmers and developers are pitted against each other in marathon brainstorming sessions to write programs that could become new products.
'The beauty of the hackathon is you get a mixture of people who never normally meet,' said Wolba. 'Engineers are 'paired with actual investors who understand something on the commercial side, but also, critically, military end users.'
Organizers want to foster a culture of nimble startups to join Europe's defense ecosystem, traditionally dominated by a handful of big 'prime' military contractors such as Britain's BAE, Germany's Rheinmetall and France's Thales that are focused on building pricey hardware.
'There's definitely been a shift in the industry from the purchase of more exquisite, high-cost capabilities, such as fighter jets, or submarines, or expensive tanks, towards more low-cost systems that can give you scale advantages,' said Richard Pass, one of the co-founders of the London event.
A recent aerial confrontation between Pakistan and India further highlights how Europe is at risk of losing its edge against adversaries, he said.
Pass said reports that Pakistan used Chinese-made fighter jets armed with Chinese air-to-air missiles to down Indian air force planes, including three French-made Rafale jets, came as a big surprise.
Not only does it show 'technological parity between the Chinese and leading Western industrial nations like France,' but it also hints at China's advantages in mass-producing fighter jets that could overwhelm Western forces, he said.
Fostering a broader European defense tech start-up ecosystem is a way 'to regain that technological advantage,' he said.
Defense tech startup founders can ride a wave of investment as Europe moves to beef up its military capabilities. Leaders of NATO, which includes 30 European nations, are meeting this week to endorse a goal to spend 5% of gross domestic product on defense.
The European Union has sought to mobilize 800 billion euros ($927 billion) to boost the 27-nation bloc's defense, with priorities including drones, AI, autonomous systems and quantum computing.
Britain, which left the EU, has meanwhile pledged to spend 10% of its defense budget on new technologies.
Europe still has a long way to go. The continent's defense tech startup ecosystem is young and about five years behind the United States, consulting firm McKinsey said in a recent report. But it's growing rapidly as investors flock there. Venture capital investment in Europe's defense tech sector for 2021-2024 more than quadrupled from the previous three-year period, according to Pitchbook.
At the London hackathon, teams worked into the evening, fueled by chocolate bars, energy drinks, fruit and a late-night pizza delivery. Army cots were available for those who wanted to catch a few hours of sleep.
Soldiers in camouflage and defense company reps hovered on the sidelines to provide advice and answer questions.
CEO Andrii Solonskyi said defense hackathons are 'a bit of a novelty.'
The industry has traditionally been more structured and formal, because 'it's a serious business and there's a lot of things that can go wrong,' he said. But, 'what we definitely feel is that you can be very agile in defense right now.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Global News
28 minutes ago
- Global News
NATO leaders to debate proposed hike to defence spending
NATO leaders are meeting to debate whether to more than double the alliance's defence spending target. Prime Minister Mark Carney is among the leaders around the table at the annual leaders' summit in The Hague, where a proposal is being discussed to increase the target to five per cent of annual GDP, up from the current two per cent. NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte's proposal would break that into two parts. The first 3.5 per cent would be for core defence needs such as jets and weapons, while the remaining 1.5 per cent would be on defence-adjacent investments including infrastructure and cybersecurity. Before the official meeting of the North Atlantic Council, Carney held bilateral meetings with the prime minister of New Zealand, Christopher Luxon, and the prime minister of Estonia, Kristen Michal. The agenda was delayed Wednesday, with leaders still arriving as of 10:30 a.m., when their meeting was scheduled to begin. Story continues below advertisement Leaders entered the meeting room about 45 minutes later than planned. Carney chatted with several leaders before the meeting, including French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand also went over to speak for a couple of minutes with U.S. Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth. A short video played before Rutte delivered remarks, with all the leaders sitting around a large table. Rutte said the meeting came at a dangerous time, noting the wars in the Middle East and Ukraine. He said NATO allies stood together and that leaders would take 'historic, transformational decisions.' 2:09 NATO 5% defence spending target tops agenda at Netherlands summit Rutte said there was a 'concrete' plan for all allies to spend five per cent of GDP to make NATO stronger. Story continues below advertisement 'This decision is deeply rooted in our core mission and is required to resource our plans and readiness,' Rutte said. 'This will also make NATO fairer, to ensure anyone and everyone contributes their fair share for our security.' Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy Rutte went on to say that 'for too long, one ally, the United States, carried too much of the burden of that commitment.' 'And that changes today,' he said, adding that Trump 'made this change possible.' Rutte said the allies will agree to further increase defence production so that its armed forces have 'everything they need.' He said decisions include continuing allies' support to Ukraine and called on Russia to 'end its aggression.' Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof added that the NATO allies were 'about to write history' by making decisions leading to an 'unprecedented increase' in its collective defence spending and a new financial balance in its alliance. 'Both are urgent, both are necessary and both will help make our transatlantic bond even stronger,' Schoof said. Noting the war in Ukraine, Schoof said there is a 'renewed awareness' that peace can't be taken for granted and that it needs to be protected. 'And yes, peace comes at a cost,' Schoof said, urging members to stand united and 'embrace' the plan. 'We must act on this swiftly and decisively.' Story continues below advertisement Carney told CNN International on Tuesday that Canada will reach the target in part by developing deposits of critical minerals and that some of the work will be done in partnership with the European Union, EU member states, the U.K. and other allies. He also said five per cent of GDP would mean a $150-billion defence budget for Canada. NATO said in 2024 Canada spent $41 billion. All 32 NATO member counties have to agree on a new spending target and will also have to debate the timeline for its implementation. 1:24 'All allies agree' on new NATO defence spending target, Secretary-General says Earlier this year, U.S. President Donald Trump suggested the U.S. might abandon its commitments to the alliance if member countries don't meet their defence spending targets. The president generated more uncertainty Tuesday when he said his commitment to the mutual defence guarantee in the NATO treaty 'depends on your definition' of that guarantee. Story continues below advertisement Pressed later by reporters, Rutte said he has no doubt about the U.S. commitment to NATO and Article 5, the portion of the NATO treaty which says an armed attack on one member is an attack on all. Trump, who has long accused the alliance of not paying its fair share toward the cost of its defence, is also the key driver behind the plan to hike members' defence spending target. At a dinner event with NATO leaders Tuesday, Rutte thanked Trump for pushing for a spending hike and getting Europe to 'truly step up.' Kerry Buck, the former Canadian ambassador to NATO, told The Canadian Press that it's in the interests of Canada and European allies to keep the U.S. in NATO as 'deep and as long as possible.' 'Whatever we can do to get through this NATO summit with few public rifts between the U.S. and other allies on anything, and satisfy a very long-standing U.S. demand to rebalance defence spending, that will be good for Canada because NATO's good for Canada,' Buck said. Britain, France, the Netherlands and Germany have all committed to the five per cent goal. NATO countries closer to the borders of Ukraine, Russia and its ally Belarus have also pledged to do so. But some are balking, including Spain and Slovakia. Story continues below advertisement Rutte warned Monday that no country can opt out of the target and that progress made toward the new target will be reviewed in four years. — With files from The Associated Press


Cision Canada
2 hours ago
- Cision Canada
Renewable energy has leading role among Canada's Best Corporate Citizens
Quebec's Boralex Inc. ranks first among this year's top sustainability performers. Best 50 Corporate Citizens dramatically outperform on sustainable investments and revenues Economy-wide growth in sustainable investments and revenues continues to outstrip non-sustainable, but aggregate levels and related performance outcomes are still falling short. TORONTO, June 25, 2025 /CNW/ - Renewable electricity producers occupy two of the top three spots in the 2025 edition of Corporate Knights' ranking of the Best 50 Corporate Citizens in Canada. Quebec-based Boralex Inc. climbed from 15 th spot on the 2024 list to become the top-ranked company this year. Alberta-based design and engineering firm Stantec once again took second spot, while Quebec-based Innergex Renewable Energy Inc. – among last year's top five – is in third spot this year. Among the 2025 Best 50 companies more than half of investments (56.4%) were classified as sustainable, in comparison to only 24.5% among all companies assessed. For sustainable revenues, comparative performance was 41.3% for the Best 50 companies and 22.2% for all companies assessed. The 2025 Best 50 companies also demonstrate the potential to dramatically elevate economy-wide performance on more specific metrics. On average the Best 50 companies earned $1.6 million dollars per tonne of carbon emitted, compared to $0.8 million for all companies assessed. They set an even higher performance benchmark on earnings per unit of energy used at $181,400 vs. $67,700 for all companies assessed. Economy-wide growth continues to be much stronger in sustainable investments and revenues than in non-sustainable. Within the all-companies-assessed sample, total sustainable investments increased 97% from 2019 to 2023 (2023: $43 billion), while sustainable revenues rose 74% (2023: $138 billion). Non-sustainable investments and revenues rose by only 26% and 34% respectively. While this is encouraging, $98 billion in annual sustainable investment is needed to achieve a net zero economy by 2050, or more than twice the current total. 1 The current growth rate will not deliver that level until 2030, indicating the need for an even greater focus on directing dollars to the right priorities.


Ottawa Citizen
2 hours ago
- Ottawa Citizen
Canadian conman flees U.S. sentencing after learning how long his prison term might be
Article content A Toronto-area conman skipped his sentencing hearing in a U.S. court, for helping swindle more than $21 million from hundreds of victims, after prosecutors alleged he kept scamming people even after his arrest and guilty plea. Article content Antonio Palazzolo, 67, did not appear in U.S. federal court in Cleveland on May 8, when he was expected to be sentenced for the large, sophisticated investment swindle pulled by a gang of Toronto-based conmen. Article content Article content What was supposed to be his long-delayed sentencing hearing after his guilty plea in 2022 turned into an abrupt five-minute session when Palazzolo failed to join Judge J. Philip Calabrese, two U.S. prosecutors and his own lawyer in court. Article content Article content Calabrese said an arrest warrant would be issued, making him a fugitive. Article content If Palazzolo had shown up, he would have heard prosecutors tell the judge that the U.S. government no longer supports a reduced sentence because 'he has continued to engage in similar fraudulent conduct since pleading guilty in this case,' according to a government memo filed in court a week before the hearing. Article content Prosecutors said Palazzolo kept pulling an almost identical fraud as the one he pleaded guilty to while he remained free in Canada on an unsecured US$20,000 bond while awaiting his sentencing. Article content As his hearing approached, three victims contacted U.S. authorities, two claiming he had ripped them off for big bucks and another that Palazzolo was trying to defraud him as recently as late April, the judge was told. Article content Article content One victim showed the government an invoice from Palazzolo for US$10,000 for a pink diamond dated April 24, according to court records. That's just two weeks before his scheduled court date. Article content Article content Palazzolo's sentencing in Ohio was scheduled after his wire fraud conspiracy conviction from his time as a crooked salesman with Paragon International Wealth Management, Inc., a Toronto firm where he went by the alias John Carson. He and other conmen duped victims in Canada and the United States into buy coloured diamonds for much more than they were worth. Article content The new allegations say that after a Toronto police raid on Paragon's Finch Avenue West telemarketing offices in 2018, Palazzolo kept tricking gullible investors into sending him huge sums for low-value stones using his own company, called Pavillion Diamonds International.