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British Army Titan, Trojan Armored Vehicles to Receive Mid-Life Upgrade

The UK has announced an industry partnership to modernize the British Army’s Titan and Trojan armored engineer vehicles.

A transparency notice outlining the strategy specified that the effort is a mid-life upgrade to the fleets, with two phases encompassing development and trials, as well as production and distribution.

Contracts for the project will amount to 63.3 million pounds ($85 million) and 76 million pounds ($102 million) respectively, excluding value-added tax.

London is scheduled to sign corresponding agreements by December 2026. Deliveries are expected to be facilitated through 2033.

Rheinmetall-BAE Venture as Lead

UK’s Defence Equipment and Support, responsible for the project initiative, noted that it has shortlisted Shropshire-based joint venture Rheinmetall BAE Land Systems (RSBL) as its intended supplier under a “direct award” framework due to “technical reasons.”

Expounding on the selection, the materiel agency said that the company has “the necessary technical expertise, knowledge and capability to deliver the requirement at a standard required.”

“Only RBSL can deliver the requirement and due to safety, interoperability, and capability risks there are no reasonable alternatives to those goods and services,” the Defence Equipment and Support stated.

“In compliance with the Authority’s contractual obligations relating to exclusive rights, RBSL is required to subcontract the embodiment work aspect of the requirement.”

The Titan and Trojan Systems

The British Army’s Titan and Trojan platforms are derived from the Challenger 2 third-generation main battle tank and are built to support clearance, mine detection, and bridging tasks on the battlefield.

The systems were commissioned in the early 2000s and have a combined fleet of over 60 vehicles in service to date.

Pictured:TITAN Armoured Vehicle Launching Bridge (No 12 Close Support Bridge) to span a ditch. British units are again exercising at Bergen-Hohne Training Area after a four-year absence. The Royal Welsh Battle Group conducted live-firing and armoured manoeuvre training as part of a validation process to test its readiness. This is part of a programme designed by the Combat Ready Testing Centre (Germany). The Royal Welsh Battlegroup is a mix of armoured fighting formations and supporting units, including the Challenger 2 Main Battle Tanks, Warrior armoured infantry vehicles, Royal Artillery Field Guns, armoured engineers and medical, logistical, signal and repair specialists. The exercise tests their interoperability and fine-tunes processes. Several hundred vehicles were transported to the Bergen-Hohne by rail and road, testing the deployable capability and the concept of the Forward Holding Base in Sennelager. The next phase of the exercise will be in August in Altmark, the German Army’s operational deployment and testing centre, including the use of the modern urban training facility. It will be the first time a British Battlegroup will train there
A Titan armored vehicle. Photo: Mike Whitehurst/British Army

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