Babcock has brought together around 30 United Kingdom Small and Medium-sized Enterprises at the Defence Battlelab in Dorset to support its General Logistics Vehicle approach to replacing the British Army’s legacy Land Rover fleet.
The convening, announced on 24 April 2026, is part of Babcock’s positioning under the Light Mobility Vehicle programme, the British Army’s requirement to replace its long-serving Land Rover utility fleet with a modern, mission-ready alternative.
The Babcock General Logistics Vehicle is based on the proven Toyota Land Cruiser and Hilux platforms, with conversion and modifications carried out at Babcock’s engineering centre in the West Midlands. The platform is designed to provide the British Army with a flexible, robust and supportable utility vehicle that can be adapted to a wide range of mission profiles, while drawing on a global parts and maintenance ecosystem that already underpins the Toyota fleet in service across challenging environments worldwide.
At the Defence Battlelab event, Babcock signed a Small and Medium-sized Enterprises Engagement Charter with the participating companies. The Charter formalises pre-bid working arrangements between the prime and its SME partners, including transparency on programme requirements, structured opportunities to participate in the General Logistics Vehicle supply chain, and a commitment to embed UK industry into the heart of the Light Mobility Vehicle programme. Chris Spicer, Babcock’s Managing Director Engineering and Systems Integration, said the engagement reflects Babcock’s commitment to working with United Kingdom SMEs and to making the British Army’s next utility vehicle a genuinely UK-anchored capability.
The activity sits inside a broader policy direction. On 27 April, Defence Minister Luke Pollard confirmed in Parliament that the Ministry of Defence has set a target to grow direct and indirect SME spend by 50 per cent on the FY 23/24 baseline, equivalent to £2.5 billion of additional SME spend, taking total annual SME spend to £7.5 billion by May 2028. Babcock’s Engagement Charter is an example of how primes are converting that headline target into formal commercial mechanisms at programme level.
For United Kingdom suppliers, the Babcock General Logistics Vehicle pre-bid window offers concrete openings across vehicle conversion and ruggedisation, body and coachwork, electrical and mechanical sub-systems, communications and electronics integration, training systems and through-life support. Particular value lies in companies that can demonstrate Toyota Land Cruiser and Hilux platform familiarity, defence-grade quality systems and West Midlands manufacturing presence. SMEs should approach Babcock pre-bid through the Engagement Charter route and track Defence Equipment and Support communications on the Light Mobility Vehicle programme as it moves towards formal competition. The Babcock GLV announcement underlines that the path to the British Army’s future Land Rover replacement runs squarely through the United Kingdom industrial base.
Image: Babcock