From a standing ovation for Ukraine’s Unmanned Systems Forces to a minister demanding a thousand-ship uncrewed navy, Navy Leaders delivered three days at Farnborough that the maritime defence world will not forget quickly.
Europe’s largest annual naval event returned to Farnborough from 19 to 21 May 2026, bringing together more than 2,200 senior naval leaders, government officials, industry representatives, and international partners from over 85 nations. CNE 2026 arrived at a moment of genuine strategic urgency.
The overarching theme running through three days of sessions, launches, and conversations was the Royal Navy’s hybrid fleet ambition, an aspiration that has moved rapidly from concept to contested industrial territory, with multiple companies arriving at Farnborough with credible propositions and a clear sense that the window to shape the programme is now.
The most discussed idea on the floor was not a platform or a weapon system. It was a philosophy. Babcock’s Sir Nick Hine made the case for what he called “commanded autonomy,” arguing that humans must remain firmly in control of intent, authorisation, and accountability.
The logic behind it was blunt. Hine told the audience: “Today’s war zones have provided irrefutable evidence. Low-cost distributed systems probe, persist, and saturate, exposing weaknesses in traditional force structures, often at a tempo that outpaces conventional procurement cycles. No allied navy will simply grow a bigger fleet quickly enough to match the pace of threat.”
Babcock’s industrial answer is ARMOR Force, the Autonomous and Remote Maritime Operational Response Force, an architecture of disaggregated systems designed for independent operations and connected by digital capabilities. It comprises a Type 31 frigate configured as a Common Command Vessel, large uncrewed surface vessels, and modular containerised Persistent Operational Deployment Systems for rapid capability deployment. Hine was equally clear that this is not a replacement for existing programmes. “It’s important to remember this is an and, not an or,” he told the room.
HII used the event to showcase its REMUS and ROMULUS systems, marking 25 years of the REMUS UUV family and highlighting the platform’s role in the Royal Navy’s hybrid fleet through the Babcock ARMOR Force partnership.
World firsts and new launches
Several companies used CNE 2026 as a launch platform. CiS claimed a world first, unveiling a fully autonomous drone dock capable of launching and recovering a UAS from a moving ship without any operator intervention. British firm RAD launched its Autonomy Core remote vessel control system, expanding into defence with a product designed to support hybrid fleet ambitions. Navantia UK unveiled a large autonomous warship concept, positioning itself as a key supplier for the Royal Navy’s hybrid fleet of the future.
BAE Systems and Thales confirmed that the Herne XLAUV is moving beyond prototype stage, with demonstrations planned for 2027 as the companies position the platform for future hybrid fleet operations.
Not every story at CNE 2026 was about autonomy as JFD’s Pete Laughton told us that divers must go deeper and stay longer as the mine threat resurges and underwater capability demands intensify, with military divers now expected to operate as part of a much broader maritime warfare system, interoperable with autonomous vehicles, tactical dive vehicles, and command nodes in an increasingly congested underwater domain. Those requirements directly informed the design of JFD’s new Stealth Multi-Role rebreather, built from the outset to be adaptable rather than fixed to a single mission profile.
The final day opened with a ministerial address from Luke Pollard, Minister for Defence Readiness and Industry, who told a packed auditorium: “I want a thousand-ship navy, but I want most of those ships to be uncrewed. We have been locked into a narrative of how many crewed platforms we have for too long: I want us to expand our thinking.” He added: “We only need to look at what Ukraine have done. If it doesn’t work in Ukraine, I don’t want to buy it here.”
He was immediately followed by a representative from Ukraine’s Unmanned Systems Forces, unnamed and unphotographed for operational security reasons, whose briefing on the current and future capabilities of Ukraine’s maritime uncrewed systems drew a standing ovation from the room.
BMT published a paper at the event arguing that the shift to a hybrid navy will change command at sea more fundamentally than any development since Admiral Fisher’s reforms. The Royal Navy’s Director Acquisition, Rear Admiral Matthew Stratton, closed the event with a summary of where the hybrid fleet ambition now stands. “Hybrid Navy is fundamentally simple: crewed where necessary, uncrewed where possible, and integrated. The question is, how do we deliver it at pace, at scale and in partnership?” His conclusion was unambiguous: “The Hybrid Navy is not just a future aspiration: it is already being delivered.”
All ten nations of the Joint Expeditionary Force also signed a statement of intent to develop a more integrated multinational force across the High North, a development that sits directly alongside the Atlantic Bastion and Atlantic Net concepts being shaped with industry.
A defining three days
The event organisers noted that more than 3,000 people passed through the doors across the three days, with representatives from 86 nations, and that the vast majority of exhibiting firms had already rebooked for 2027. CNE 2026 arrived at a rare convergence of political will, industrial momentum, and operational urgency.
The hybrid navy is no longer a vision statement. Companies are building it, arguing over the architecture, and competing for the contracts that will define the Royal Navy for a generation.












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Viewing this site on my mates Laptop yesterday was painful to the extreme. So many Adverts and Spam content, just not a good site If supposed to be taken seriously.
Luckily I have an Ad Blocker on mine.
Any chance of an Upvote/downvote/block feature George ?
Chill bro! I come on here just to see that older Asian with the big boobies sometimes!
On a serious note, I’m glad this year’s naval comic-con/sci-fi convention is over so we can all get back to reality and whinge about the lack of proper escorts!
Lol.
These “Proper Escorts” you speak of, were two a penny on here in the Adverts.
I had 3 Ukrainians, 1 Bulgarian and a Russian all pop up on one article. Oh and Toe Fungus pics…. lots of fungus infected toes… It’s enough to put me off feet !
I keep getting the Toe fungus adds as well! 😆
Have not had any nice ladies on display for some time.😒
I like the big jug(fun bags )!
We had up vote, down vote briefly, years ago.
It was abused, so it was rightly discontinued.
👍👎👊 Ahh, that figures.
Normally a bunch of random poster names appear and abuse someone genuine.
Or, if they have an agenda and dislike you, will downvote even if your post was mundane and non controversial, factual even.
Yes, best that it’s left out.
You think the comments section is lively now. You should have seen it a few years back. You would have loved it. Arguments that lasted whole weekends and beyond or until one of you got banned 😆
Ahhh, Pollard and his 1,000 ship navy.
“If it doesn’t work in Ukraine I don’t want it here.”
Oh dear….the UKR are fighting for their lives and don’t need to power project beyond their border, apart from into Russia.
We do! We have, or had, a Blue Water navy, we have overseas bases and obligations.
And yes, we are fixated on “how many manned platforms”
Because YOU, HMG, keep cutting them and still expect the military to deploy with less as part of your endless Grandstanding.
How many men are you sending to UKR as a part of your peacekeeping fantasy? From an army barely able to field 5 full Brigades?
How many ships are sailing the world’s seas right now??
God help us…