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Polish Fuel Group Unimot Takes 40 % Stake in New Polish‑Ukrainian Drone Venture PZL Defence

by Roman Cheplyk
Monday, July 28, 2025
2 MIN
Polish Fuel Group Unimot Takes 40 % Stake in New Polish‑Ukrainian Drone Venture PZL Defence

First PLN 400 k ($100 k) round will launch civilian UAV production in Poland, then shift to military drones and counter‑drone tech using combat‑tested Ukrainian know‑how

What’s happening?

  • New company PZL Defence registered 21 July 2025; paperwork now under way.

  • Initial capital: PLN 1 m (≈ $250 k).

    • Unimot — 40 % for PLN 400 k

    • PZL Sędziszów — 10 %

    • Unnamed Ukrainian partner — 50 %

  • Phase 1: build civilian drones in Poland using PZL Sędziszów’s 85‑year‑old aerospace plant and labs.

  • Phase 2: pivot to armed UAVs, loitering munitions and anti‑drone systems for critical‑infrastructure defence.

Why it matters

  1. Combat‑proven R&D. Ukrainian engineers bring front‑line drone experience straight into EU production, shortening development cycles.

  2. Strategic timing. Poland’s defence budget hits a record PLN 186.6 bn (4.7 % GDP) this year; EU SAFE & Readiness 2030 programmes unlock up to €800 bn for defence industry financing.

  3. Counter‑Shahed race. Russia has launched >28 000 Shahed drones at Ukraine; forecasts climb to 500 per night. Affordable interceptors and EW kits are a NATO‑wide priority.

Who’s behind it?

  • Unimot – Warsaw‑listed fuel & energy group diversifying into defence tech.

  • PZL Sędziszów – Polish aerospace supplier already making filters for Rosomak APCs and Leonardo helicopters.

  • Ukrainian co‑founder – undisclosed firm providing battlefield‑validated drone designs and tactical feedback.

Next milestones

  • Regulatory clearances and final share transfer (Q3 2025).

  • First civilian UAVs off the line by early 2026.

  • Dedicated R&D centre to open mid‑2026; prototype loitering munition by year‑end.

Bottom line
Unimot’s modest $100 k seed ticket signals bigger ambitions: a Polish‑Ukrainian production hub capable of turning Europe’s record defence budgets—and Kyiv’s real‑war experience—into next‑gen drones and counter‑drone shields.

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