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Home » UK Union Warns Defence Job Losses as Defence Investment Plan Faces Further Delay

UK Union Warns Defence Job Losses as Defence Investment Plan Faces Further Delay

Labour union warns delay in defence spending plan hurts jobs, skills and industry confidence

by Editorial Team
0 comments 2 minutes read
UK defence investment plan delay

Delay in UK Defence Investment Plan Threatens Jobs, Skills

Trade union Unite has warned that further delays in the UK government’s Defence Investment Plan are putting thousands of defence jobs and specialised industrial skills at risk. The plan, originally expected last summer alongside the Strategic Defence Review, has been postponed multiple times and may now slip into March or later, according to union statements.

Unite represents a broad cross section of workers across the UK defence sector. The union says that uncertainty around defence spending commitments has made planning and investment difficult for employers and has increased the risk of job losses.

The group has also highlighted concerns that speculation about increased reliance on US-made equipment, rather than products built in the UK, is adding to industrial uncertainty and undermining domestic capability.

Union Urges Urgent Government Action

Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said the delay amounts to “an act of self-harm,” warning that businesses are “planning in the dark” and job losses may follow if the government does not act quickly. The union argues that previous pledges linking higher defence spending to jobs and innovation now need concrete follow-through.

In a letter to Prime Minister Keir Starmer, senior representatives from Leonardo and other major defence firms called for swift publication of the investment plan to safeguard jobs and industrial capabilities.

Risks to Industrial Skills and Sovereign Capability

Unite says that the continued uncertainty risks eroding highly specialised skills that are difficult to rebuild once lost. The union has called for confirmed commitments in several flagship programmes, including new Eurofighter Typhoon jets assembled in the UK with British engines and weapons, awarding the medium lift helicopter contract to Leonardo’s Yeovil facility, and retaining domestic production of the Skynet military satellite communications system.

Industry and political figures have also raised concerns over the broader impact of defence planning delays. Peers in the House of Lords recently criticised the slow progress of the investment plan and stressed that visible action is needed to maintain industry confidence.

Broader Defence Context

The UK defence investment plan is central to executing priorities set out in the Strategic Defence Review and to aligning future defence spending with industrial base renewal. Continued delay has been linked to internal government debates over affordability and procurement priorities. Independent sources have noted that the plan was expected before the end of 2025 but remains unpublished amid cost and policy reviews.

Industry concerns extend to specific programmes. For example, delays in contracts such as medium lift helicopters have put thousands of jobs at risk, with some firms warning of possible factory closures without confirmed orders.

Outlook

Unite is pressing for immediate publication of the Defence Investment Plan and for confirmed procurement decisions to give defence companies and workers the clarity they need. The union frames this as essential both for protecting jobs and for sustaining the UK’s sovereign defence capabilities.

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