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Home » Belgian Security Push Lifts DroneShield’s European Growth Drive
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Belgian Security Push Lifts DroneShield’s European Growth Drive

David ChenBy David ChenDecember 11, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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Australian drone-defense specialist DroneShield has secured a fresh Belgian order for portable jam devices, underscoring Europe’s rising role as a core growth engine for the company. The deal value stands at 2.8 million euros and is anchored in Belgium’s interim anti-drone program, which totals 50 million euros and sits within a broader national package of 500 million euros. The purchase bolsters Belgium’s ability to detect, disrupt, and defend critical civilian and military sites against unmanned systems.

Belgian order details and strategic context
– What’s being bought: Handheld anti-drone systems, including the DroneGun Tactical platform, designed for field use and protecting sensitive infrastructure.
– System specifics: The DroneGun Tactical is a rifle-style emitter weighing around 7.3 kilograms and offering an operational range of roughly 1 to 2 kilometers. The devices deliver broadband RF interference to disrupt control links, video feeds, and satellite navigation.
– Operational outcomes: Depending on the drone type, the jammer can cause a safe landing, in-air hover, or return-to-launch behavior. The goal is “controlled neutralization” in densely populated or critical zones to avoid debris risks associated with direct drone destruction.

Context within Europe’s security push
The Belgium contract is part of a rapid sequence of European orders that DroneShield has announced since 2025. Notable items include:
– A substantial European military deployment win worth 61.6 million euros in June.
– A follow-on order of 5.2 million AUD for Handheld systems placed with a European army that remains unnamed, announced in November.
– More than 70 million AUD in cumulative contracts through a single European distributor.

CEO narrative and regional growth trajectory
CEO Oleg Vornik has flagged Europe as the company’s fastest-expanding export market. The momentum is driven in part by the ongoing Ukraine conflict and the EU’s Re-Arm Europe initiative, which aims to amplify defense investment, backed by a portfolio exceeding 800 billion euros. The Belgian engagement reinforces this trend and adds to DroneShield’s NATO-related references.

European production ambitions and onshore footprint
To accommodate rising European demand, DroneShield is developing a European “Centre of Excellence.” The plan envisions European manufacturing capacity coming online in the first quarter of 2026. Candidate sites include Belgium or the Netherlands, with an agreement with a local producer targeted for early 2026. The objective is to shorten supply chains, reduce logistics costs, and deepen ties with regional partners—factors that commonly strengthen a vendor’s position in future procurement rounds where national value creation becomes a political imperative.

Financial highlights and stock action
DroneShield’s third quarter of 2025 signaled a strong growth run. Key metrics included:
– Revenue: 93 million AUD, roughly eight times the prior-year level.
– Operating cash flow: +20 million AUD, reversing a prior deficit of 19 million AUD.
– Gross margin: 65%–75%.

Following the quarterly results, the stock’s performance surged, with a year-to-date gain around 484% noted at one point. In euro terms, the shares traded at about 1.24 EUR, well below their 52-week high of 3.65 EUR. The year’s low stood at 0.36 EUR, leaving an upside of over 240% from that trough. Technical indicators showed a 14-day RSI of 36 and roughly 158% 30-day volatility, signaling a highly volatile, growth-oriented risk profile.

Market outlook and addressable opportunities
The anti-drone market is expanding rapidly. Global market estimates put 2025 activity at roughly USD 4.5 billion, with a projection toward USD 14.5 billion by 2030, implying a compound annual growth rate around 26.5%. DroneShield cites an addressable landscape of about USD 35 billion in military applications and USD 28 billion in civil use.

The company expects NATO-related tenders to continue expanding and is pursuing a ramp-up of production capacity in Europe and the United States (US manufacturing targeted for mid-2026) to secure a longer-term foothold in the sector.

2026 milestones and catalysts
Looking ahead, several milestones are anticipated for 2026:
– Europe: The new European plant could commence operations in the first quarter of 2026.
– United States: Local production is planned to begin around mid-2026.
– Belgium: The Beauvechain-based national Airspace Security Centre is set to start operations on January 1, 2026, potentially triggering additional C-UAS procurement activity.
– Corporate policy: DroneShield intends to raise its reporting threshold for publicly disclosed contracts from 5 to 20 million AUD, aligning with a higher average deal size anticipated in the period ahead.

In short, the Belgian contract is not a one-off event but a reinforcing piece of a broader growth strategy that aims to accelerate both operational momentum and structural expansion in 2026.

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David Chen
David Chen

David Chen is an automotive and mobility markets writer at Primary Ignition, focused on the financial side of how the world builds and buys vehicles. His coverage centers on electric vehicles and the global EV competition, including BYD's vertical integration, Chinese automakers scaling abroad, and the legacy OEMs adapting to them. He also digs into the financing layer that rarely makes headlines but moves the numbers: auto-loan structures, the EV lease revival, and how Fed rate decisions ripple through dealer floors and automaker balance sheets. His work extends to emerging mobility, from eVTOL timelines to AI-driven mobility finance. David writes for readers who want the investment story underneath the product story, the reason a factory tour or a leasing promotion actually matters to a stock. His coverage spans automotive stocks, e-mobility, earnings, and market commentary.

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