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欧洲投资70亿美元支持乌克兰无人机产业
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欧洲正计划向乌克兰的无人机产业注入70亿美元,以期大规模生产低成本但高效的武器。欧盟委员会主席表示,这笔资金将优先用于乌克兰无人机生产,以应对俄方的无人机威胁。乌克兰的无人机产业已成为全球领先力量,由众多本土制造商和军事单位驱动,但常面临资金短缺。此次注资接近乌克兰国防部长提出的年度生产所需资金。这些无人机在战场上已证明其有效性,摧毁俄方装备并阻碍地面进攻。资金来源为被冻结的俄罗斯资产的利息,但具体可用金额和分配细节尚未完全明确。

🇪🇺 欧洲宣布向乌克兰无人机产业投资70亿美元,旨在加速其大规模生产,以应对战场需求。这笔资金将优先用于支持乌克兰本土的无人机制造能力,以提升其在该领域的国际竞争力。

🇺🇦 乌克兰的无人机产业已展现出强大的创新和生产潜力,尽管面临资金短缺,但仍能生产出低成本且高效的武器。该国估计每年有能力生产800万架无人机,但缺乏足够的资金来实现这一目标。

💰 此次投资的资金来源为被冻结的俄罗斯资产所产生的利息,但具体有多少资金已准备就绪以及详细的分配计划尚未完全公布。欧盟委员会表示,这笔资金将从一个更大的援助计划中加速拨付。

🎯 乌克兰无人机在战场上扮演着关键角色,据估计,它们造成了俄方至少23%的装备损失,并在阻止俄方地面进攻方面发挥了重要作用。这些无人机类型多样,包括用于攻击的FPV无人机、侦察无人机以及用于打击远距离目标的远程无人机。

🌐 欧洲此举不仅是经济援助,更是对其盟友在军事技术领域发展支持的体现。该计划可能涉及欧盟成员国和欧洲工业界,意味着部分资金可能用于采购欧洲制造的无人机相关产品或技术,以增强乌克兰的整体防御能力。

Ukraine's decentralized drone industry is driven by a network of military units and private manufacturers who are connected via a market-like network.

Europe is poised to inject $7 billion into Ukraine's drone industry, hoping to supercharge mass production for the country's increasingly renowned low-cost weapons.

The European Commission's president, Ursula von der Leyen, said on Wednesday that the European Union would "frontload 6 billion euros," or roughly $7 billion, for Ukrainian drones.

"Ukraine has the ingenuity. What it needs now is scale," von der Leyen said in her State of the European Union address.

The announced $7 billion would be the biggest official tranche of funding to Ukraine's drone industry so far.

It's close to the $6 billion that Ukraine's defense minister, Denys Shmyhal, has said Kyiv needs to cover this year's production of first-person-view drones, interceptors, long-range drones, and missiles.

While new, Ukraine's drone industry has increasingly been in the spotlight for producing cheap but effective weapons regularly being used to destroy Russian loitering munitions, armor, artillery, and production facilities.

Importantly, they also allow Kyiv's troops to harass and halt Russian ground assaults from afar, meaning additional or improved drones could further stifle Moscow's ability to advance or attrit Ukrainian forces.

The local drone industry is now seen as a globally leading force, driven by a wide range of domestic manufacturers and individual military units. Many of these firms and troops are often strapped for cash, partially relying on volunteer donations and crowdfunding to update their drones or stay afloat.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy estimated in June that his country had the capacity to make 8 million drones a year, but lacked the funding to do so.

In her speech, von der Leyen said that Ukrainian drones were responsible for at least 23% of Russian equipment losses. Ukrainian officials have said that at least 70% of all reported hits in the war were caused by drones.

She also spoke of Ukraine's need to fight Russia's growing Shahed waves, indicating that the money could be used to fund the production of interceptor drones.

"So we can use our industrial strength to support Ukraine to counter this drone warfare," von der Leyen said.

Per von der Leyen, the funding will come from interest on frozen Russian assets.

However, it's not immediately clear how much of the $7 billion is now ready to be used in Ukraine. Europe estimates that frozen Russian assets can, at most, generate interest of roughly $3.5 billion a year.

Nor has the European Commission publicly detailed plans on how the money will be disbursed or monitored.

Balazs Ujvari, a Commission spokesperson, told Business Insider in an email that the funds come from a larger assistance program for Ukraine that distributes about $1.17 billion a month. He said that the $7 billion announced for drones would be accelerated for Ukraine.

The exact payment schedule is to be determined "in the near future," Ujvari added.

At a midday press conference on Thursday, another Commission spokesperson, Thomas Regnier, said the drone funds would involve EU member states and "European industry players," indicating that some of the $7 billion might be spent on European businesses to help Ukraine.

"It can be for surveillance drones, it can be for other types of drones," Regnier told reporters.

Von der Leyen said that since 2022, Europe has contributed close to $200 billion in financial and military aid to Ukraine.

While drones are often associated with the first-person-view, or FPV, propeller platforms used to fly into enemy targets with explosives, Ukraine has also been experimenting with a range of uncrewed aerial, naval, and ground systems in combat.

More recently, it's been codifying more ground-based robots to relieve human soldiers from dangerous frontline combat tasks.

Some of Kyiv's long-range munitions are also drones, such as the winged platforms it's been using to strike Russia's production facilities hundreds of miles from the border.

September 11, 2025: This story was updated to reflect comments from the European Commission.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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乌克兰无人机 欧洲援助 军事技术 俄罗斯资产 Ukraine drones European aid military technology Russian assets
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