According to procurementmag.com, Babcock International Group is directing £550 million per year to Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) across the UK supply chain as a core pillar of its operational resilience strategy.
Strategic Integration of SMEs
Babcock’s Chief Delivery Officer, Donna Sinnick, emphasizes that SMEs constitute the lifeblood of British industry — representing 99% of UK employers and employing 60% of the UK workforce. She states:
“They are absolutely vital to UK national security. If we think about technology, pace and innovation, there’s a massive element that can be unlocked through the SME community that in defence, we should be unlocking and driving.” — Donna Sinnick, Chief Delivery Officer, Babcock International Group
The company supports approximately 22,000 jobs across its UK supply chain, with SMEs accounting for about one-third of Babcock’s total UK spend. Yet only 4% of total UK defence expenditure flows to SMEs — a gap the company aims to close through systemic reform.
The Ten-Point SME Engagement Charter
Launched in 2026, Babcock’s ten-point SME engagement charter introduces binding, practical commitments to lower barriers to entry. These include proportionate contracts, faster payments, clearer engagement pathways, and dedicated support for scaling. The charter aligns with the UK government’s 2025 Strategic Defence Review and Defence Industrial Strategy, both of which identify SME integration as critical to accelerating R&D and translating innovation into operational capability.
Babcock’s global footprint spans Australia, New Zealand, Canada, France, and South Africa, and it manages its supply chain as an end-to-end global system while delivering locally — a model designed to embed responsiveness and proximity to customer needs.
Technology-Driven Risk Management
To strengthen resilience amid geopolitical volatility and supply disruption, Babcock is developing proprietary tools. Its supply chain dynamic risk management tool enables real-time environmental scanning, scenario planning, and worst-case risk evaluation. The system supports rapid insight generation and informs mitigation actions across Babcock’s global supply chain team.
In parallel, the company is building internal AI solutions to process high-volume data streams and accelerate problem-solving. These tools complement third-party partnerships and reinforce Babcock’s dual focus on agility and sovereign capability.
Research and Collaborative Validation
Babcock partnered with the University of Exeter on a research initiative titled Next Line of Defence, aimed at identifying structural levers to improve long-term SME resilience. Findings directly informed the design of the SME charter and underpin Babcock’s approach to co-development — treating SMEs not as transactional vendors but as strategic growth partners.
The company works with more than 4,000 SMEs across its programmes and supply chain. Examples include contributions to the HMS Active rollout and the Jackal production line, where SMEs delivered specialized components and embedded engineering innovation.
Responsible Procurement as Operational Imperative
For Babcock, responsible procurement is non-negotiable: it ensures compliance with evolving regulatory standards, anchors quality assurance frameworks, and delivers on corporate responsibility and sustainability goals. Contrary to common perception, Sinnick affirms that sustainability is “absolutely critical” in defence procurement — a stance validated by the charter’s inclusion of capacity-building and ethical sourcing provisions.
Source: procurementmag.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










