According to a recent article in The Economist Britain is becoming pretty good at both building and using drones.
This doesn't just meen teenagers down the park, drones are increasingly used in a lot of different sectors - obvioulsy the military but also civil - by the emergency services and surveyors for example.
The article specfically refers to Swindon, which is becoming something of a uK hub for the drone industry. The Ministry of Defence wants to set up a big drone-testing site nearby.
Already, top defence companies and specialist manufacturers are moving in.
The war in Ukraine changed alot. Cheap, off-the-shelf drones are taking out tanks and spying on enemy positions in ways that cost a fraction of traditional weapons. Giant tanks and super jets out - cheap drone swarms in!
Every time the rules of war shift, new economic doors open. Britain’s already strong in defence research, aerospace, AI, and manufacturing. Companies like BAE Systems and Leonardo are in deep with this tech, and universities are spinning out talent all the time. If these threads come together right, Britain could carve out a real spot in the worldwide drone market.
There’s a political shift happening here too. For decades, critics have said British governments didn’t care much about manufacturing—they watched factories close and put their faith in finance and real estate instead.
Now, with drones, things look different. The government is putting real money and attention into this sector. It's offering support through setting up testing grounds, research cash, defense contracts. They’re helping build the whole ecosystem from scratch.
It fits a wider global trend. China is all-in on making stuff at home, the U.S. is paying for chip factories, and Europe goes on about “strategic autonomy.” Now maybe Britain can get in on this act too...?
Of course drone companies don't just succeed here for no reason, they are able to benefit from connections to the UK's well established defence and aerospace companies.
And a lot of the funding is likely to be funnelled through government defence contracts...
Britain’s drone industry is part of something bigger—technology, security, artificial intelligence, and government policy are all intertwined in making this a growth area.
And the fact that people are now openly talking about manufacturing, old-school industrial clusters, and long-term science policy suggests a hedge against our 40 year old reliance on finance, which I find refreshing!