Where £80,000,000,000 a year will be spent in the UK’s Defence Investment Plan

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web
browser that
supports HTML5
video

Up Next

After months of delay and the resignations of two defence ministers, Sir Keir Starmer has finally announced his investment plan for the British armed forces.

It doesn’t include quite as much money as the Ministry of Defence was asking for – a key reason why John Healey and Al Carns stepped down – but the PM says its impact will be transformative.

In a speech at defence firm Molloy Aeronautics this morning, he said £80 billion a year will be spent on defence by 2029.

With Chancellor Rachel Reeves trying to reduce the government’s reliance on borrowing, much of the extra cash will come from cuts to other government plans.

Starmer picked out road and energy projects as being among those that will ‘not go ahead right now’ – though he did not specify which.

The PM also highlighted a new military landscape where tanks, warships and piloted planes are declining in significance compared to drones and autonomous vehicles.

Everything is changing, all the time

Cut through political noise and understand how the Westminster chaos actually affects your life with Metro’s politics newsletter Alright, Gov? Sign up here.

British Army soldiers from 3 Rifles check a single-rotor helicopter style Ghost drone, which operates via global mobile networks and can be remotely piloted from anywhere in the world with extreme portability and uses AI software to help soldiers to let the drone autonomously identify, classify, and track objects of interest in a battle. The all-weather resilient Ghost drone is being used to keep eyes on the battlefield at an undisclosed training ground less than 50 kilometres from the Russian border in Finland where NATO troops are taking part in Ex NORTHERN STAR, led by the Finnish military, where coalition soldiers from work alongside their NATO allies and train in combat to deter aggressive neighbouring states. The large scale ground exercise, comprising of around 4,000 coalition troops include the use of these new technologies, including both the Ghost reconnaissance and Bolt attack drones alongside newly adopted Android Team Awareness Kit (ATAK), which is a phone-sized electronic screen displaying GPS and geospatial mapping with real-time locations of troops, allowing commanders to see the entire battle picture instantly, locating friendly forces and striking enemy targets. Picture date: Monday May 25, 2026. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Ben Birchall/PA Wire
The use of drones has dramatically changed how warfare is conducted in the 2020s (Picture: Ben Birchall/PA Wire)

Downing Street has set out some of the big-money items that are set to receive a wad of government cash now the investment plan has been finalised.

They include:

  • More than £63 billion will be spent over the next four years on a new nuclear warhead, Dreadnought and SSN-AUKUS submarines, and other work on the nuclear deterrent
  • More than £5 billion on a drone ‘transformation’, including £650 million on expendable drones and other uncrewed vehicles heavily inspired by warfare innovations in Ukraine
  • £11 billion to increase stockpiles of munitions and weapons
  • More than £8 billion for a programme to develop and build a  next-generation stealth fighter jet for the RAF, working with Japan and Italy
  • £26 billion – including some of the nuclear deterrent cash – for a major project to upgrade several of the UK’s naval bases
  • £790 million to protect the UK and its overseas bases from ‘air, drone and missile threats’, with new radar and sensor systems and investment in Directed Energy Weapons
  • £900 million on an efficiency drive to save more money in the long run, including investment in AI to boost productivity
  • £100 million to ramp up the deployment of AI capabilities for the UK armed forces – and £115 million to protect against AI threats

Starmer said ‘every pound in this plan will work twice’, reinforcing national security while also providing jobs and economic growth.

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web
browser that
supports HTML5
video

Up Next

Dan Jarvis, who replaced Healey as Defence Secretary, said: ‘I have secured more money and made different choices for defence.

‘We will invest £298 billion over the next four years. That includes an additional £15 billion, of which most is extra day-to-day spending for training and improving availability of ships and aircraft to increase our war-fighting readiness.

‘By choosing to embrace new technology, I am equipping our troops with the autonomous systems which will give them the edge on the battlefield.’

However, the Conservatives argued the plan is ‘not worth the paper it’s written on’, as Starmer has already stepped down as Prime Minister and his successor – almost certainly Andy Burnham – could alter it.

The Tory shadow defence secretary James Cartlidge said: ‘The next Prime Minitser needs to cut welfare and give our armed forces the funding they need to keep Britain safe.’

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *