logo
NATO's ‘tech race': This is how it aims to harness new defence tech

NATO's ‘tech race': This is how it aims to harness new defence tech

Euronews9 hours ago

As defence technologies and the geopolitical climate rapidly evolve, NATO has formally launched a plan to speed the adoption of new tech products.
World leaders gathered at the NATO summit at the Hague on Tuesday, with the organisation's new secretary general Mark Rutte and many allies ready to sign on to raising core defence spending to 3.5 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) by 2035.
One of the main points to be decided is the Rapid Adoption Action plan. As its name suggests, it aims to speed up how NATO and its allies can integrate technologies from companies so it can use the latest tech products within a maximum of 24 months.
'We are in what we call a tech race,' Jean-Charles Ellermann-Kingombe, NATO assistant secretary general for innovation, hybrid, and cyber, said in a press briefing which Euronews Next attended.
He said that in Russia's war against Ukraine, Russia has reduced the product development cycle to as short as two to 12 weeks.
Meanwhile, he said China has 'a serious integration of their defence industry and their defence forces'.
'We have a defence industry that has been struggling to keep up pace. We've seen it following the war in Ukraine as we've been emptying our stocks. Production lines have had difficulties to keeping up the pace,' Ellermann-Kingombe said.
Lessons from Ukraine
Ellermann-Kingombe also said that the first starting point for NATO will be looking at what tech has to offer.
He said the speed of artificial intelligence (AI) advancements and the rapid development of drones during the war in Ukraine show that 'tech today is ready and able to actually fill some of the gaps'.
AI, for example, has helped NATO by enabling precision strikes and reducing decision time by 90 per cent. But the organisation said it needs to adapt to working with start-ups and tech companies.
'The new ecosystems work in a different way than we're used to,' said Ellermann-Kingombe, referring to procurement requirements.
'So if we want to exploit what that ecosystem has to offer, we also need to adapt to the way that they work,' he added.
The Rapid Adoption Action plan aims to bridge this divide by sharing market research on a voluntary basis among allies and increasing testing to lower risks from new tech, among other measures.
But access to governments or defence ministries is lucrative, and it is difficult for start-ups to get a foot in the door, Euronews Next previously reported. A tech company working with NATO said the organisation's 'stamp of approval' helped it work with governments.
NATO said in the press conference that it aims to provide a so-called badge of approval to companies that show their solutions to the military, either through a NATO programme or another way. The badge would work as a form of recognition from NATIO that the companies could then use.
NATO has test centres in 29 allied nations and innovators from 20 countries, said John Ridge, chief adoption officer at the NATO Innovation Fund (NIF).
The NIF Fund is a deep tech venture capital fund that is supported by 24 of NATO's 32 nations. It focuses on deep tech dual-use investments that support defence, security and resilience.
It works with NATO's Defence Innovation Accelerator for the North Atlantic
(DIANA), a NATO body that aims to find and accelerate dual-use innovation capacity. However, NIF does not have to invest in technologies identified by DIANA.
What tech is NATO interested in?
DIANA innovators are now working on a range of new tech, including power generation on the high seas and advanced passive exoskeletons that give soldiers more strength on the battlefield and people with disabilities more mobility at home, Ridge said at the press conference attended by Euronews Next.
Some of the technologies NATO has invested in include Portuguese drone company Tekever and Germany's robotics company ARX Robotics GmbH, both of which are used in Ukraine.
NATO has looked at more than 2,000 start-ups and has invested in 12, said Ridge.
The organisation is looking into autonomy and keeping soldiers out of risk as it considers the future of defence.
'It seems to me as if that's a sort of a direction which all militaries are going to go. The way you can remove human beings from harm's way, why wouldn't you? So that's one of the trends that we're all ready to see, and I suspect we'll double down onto that,' said Ridge.
Ridge also wants to make industrial bases more resilient so they can operate in war time, for example, by investing in semiconductor companies to make them more scalable.
'One of the lessons we should be drawing out of Ukraine is how you're able to mobilise your industry base at time of [war] to really ramp up production,' Ridge said.
'That's not a new lesson. That's a World War One lesson. That's a World War II lesson'.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump rattles NATO allies as he descends on summit
Trump rattles NATO allies as he descends on summit

LeMonde

time2 hours ago

  • LeMonde

Trump rattles NATO allies as he descends on summit

US President Donald Trump swept into NATO's Hague summit Tuesday, June 24, with allies hoping a pledge to ramp up defense spending will keep the mercurial leader of the military superpower committed to protecting them. Trump joined leaders from NATO's 31 other members to kick off the two-day gathering with a dinner hosted by Dutch King Willem-Alexander in the ornate Orange Hall at his royal residence. The alliance hopes to keep Trump bound to its mutual defense vow by meeting his demand for a headline figure of 5% of GDP on defense spending. But Trump refused to say he was committed to NATO's Article Five clause and protecting Europe in comments that will likely rattle his counterparts on the continent. "Depends on your definition. There's numerous definitions of Article Five," Trump told journalists aboard Air Force One. "I'm committed to being their friend." To keep Trump on board, NATO members have thrashed out a compromise deal to dedicate 3.5% to core military needs by 2035, and 1.5% to broader security-related areas such as cybersecurity and infrastructure. NATO says the military build-up is crucial to deter Russia, which officials warn is rapidly rebuilding its forces depleted by the war in Ukraine and could be ready to attack the alliance in five years. But it is just as important for keeping Trump engaged as Washington warns it may shift forces from Europe to face the threat from China. "They're going to be lifting it to 5%, that's good," Trump said. "It gives them much more power." But while the promise of more spending could win Trump over, deep divisions remain over the approach to Europe's key security issue: Russia's war in Ukraine. Trump said he would probably meet Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky while in The Hague, with Kyiv hoping it can avoid a repeat of the pair's infamous Oval Office bust-up. 'The Europe of defense has finally awakened' European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen told an audience in The Hague that NATO's "historic" spending pledge showed that "the Europe of defense has finally awakened." Alliance leaders, meanwhile – many of whom are struggling to find the money that will be required – lined up to argue that the threats facing the continent required bold steps. "We must navigate this era of radical uncertainty with agility," British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said in announcing the UK's commitment to meet the target. Starmer, on Wednesday, will formally announce that his country is buying a dozen F-35A fighters, capable of carrying atomic weapons to support NATO's nuclear mission. The purchase marks an expansion of Britain's nuclear deterrence, which is currently limited to submarine-launched missiles. A statement late Tuesday from Starmer's office quoted NATO Chief Mark Rutte as saying: "I strongly welcome today's announcement," calling it "yet another robust British contribution to NATO." Separately, powerhouse Germany announced plans to hit the 3.5% figure for core defense needs by 2029 – six years before the timeline. At the other end of the scale, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has risked Trump's ire by insisting his country doesn't have to meet the five percent target. For its part, the Kremlin attacked NATO for its "rampant militarisation", with spokesman Dmitry Peskov saying: "This is the reality that surrounds us." New Since storming back to power, Trump has upended the West's approach to the three-year conflict by turning his back on Kyiv and opening the door to closer ties with Moscow. Zelensky was set to play less of a central role than at recent NATO gatherings and will not attend the main working session. But Ukraine's president said he would discuss with Trump buying a package of weapons made up mainly of air defenses. Zelensky would also push Trump on imposing new sanctions on Russia as Moscow has stalled peace efforts being pressed by Washington, Kyiv said. "There are no signs that Putin wants to stop this war. Russia rejects all peace proposals, including those from the US. Putin only thinks about war," the Ukrainian leader told a defense forum held alongside the summit. Trump did briefly meet on the sidelines of the summit late Tuesday with Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who urged "close dialogue" to end the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Rutte said allies would send the message that support for Kyiv was "unwavering and will persist." But despite his insistence that Ukraine's bid for membership remains "irreversible," NATO will avoid any mention of Kyiv's push to join after Trump ruled it out.

Spain says NATO 5% spending target is 'unreasonable'
Spain says NATO 5% spending target is 'unreasonable'

France 24

time7 hours ago

  • France 24

Spain says NATO 5% spending target is 'unreasonable'

24/06/2025 Iran-Israel conflict: NATO countries 'setting out parameters and objectives' ahead of summit Middle East 24/06/2025 Macron and Støre denounce 'illegal' US strikes on Iran, call for 'diplomatic solution' Europe 21/06/2025 Vatican: Saint Peter Basilica's cupola gets a makeover Europe 21/06/2025 Fete de la musique: a French celebration of music that has gone international Europe 21/06/2025 Italy's Meloni touts €1.2 bn plan to boost Africa economies: mirage or reality? Europe 21/06/2025 Ukraine: Life in a partially destroyed building in Kyiv On the ground Europe 16/06/2025 An independent Russian website reveals links between Telegram and Russian FSB Europe 16/06/2025 Spaniards turn water guns on visitors in Barcelona and Mallorca to protest mass tourism Europe 12/06/2025 Climate change disrupting species' habitats and altering both productivity and seasonality Environment

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store