The Westminster lensArchive · Written questions · 3,185 tabled · 3,177 answered

Written questions by Cartlidge.

Every parliamentary written question tabled by James Cartlidge this session, with the full answer and department. Back to the MP page.

Department:All (3,185)Ministry of Defence (2790)Treasury (92)Department of Health and Social Care (56)Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (54)Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (31)Cabinet Office (25)Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (21)Department for Culture, Media and Sport (20)Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (19)Department for Transport (15)Department for Education (14)Northern Ireland Office (13)

Showing 561580 of 3,185 · this parliament

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21 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

With reference to his Department's press release entitled Cutting-edge drone degree to train military forces of the future unveiled, published on 21 January 2025, whether the undergraduate drone degree will involve training in the use of drones.

Reply

The undergraduate drone degree is designed to equip students with the technical skills required to build, upgrade and sustain drone systems, rather than to train them in their operational use. Some elements of the programme will involve students working with industry and defence partners on practical problem solving projects, which may include challenges linked to the operational employment of drones in combat settings. Students on the programme will not participate in military exercises. However, having Army personnel learning alongside civilian students, supported by academic staff and defence contractors, will provide valuable insight into the realities of operating drones in contested environments and supports a collaborative approach to innovation. The course does not provide training in how to operate drones; this is delivered separately through the Army’s existing small Uncrewed Aircraft Systems training pathways. Instead, the degree focuses on ensuring personnel have the technical knowledge and engineering expertise to sustain and adapt drone systems at the pace required by rapidly evolving operational demands, as seen in Ukraine

21 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

If he will list the counter-drone technology currently used by the specialist RAF counter-drone unit stationed in Denmark.

Reply

There is no specialist RAF counter-drone unit currently stationed in Denmark.A small number of personnel from the RAF Regiment's No2 Counter Uncrewed Air Systems (CUAS) Wing deployed to Denmark in October 2025 at the request of the Danish Government who were hosting two major European summits.All personnel and equipment returned to the UK after the conclusion of the summits.

21 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

If he will make an assessment of the potential impact of his timetable for publishing the Defence Investment Plan on the procurement of directed energy weapons.

Reply

Defence continues to manage its capabilities and programmes to ensure they are not unnecessarily impacted or delayed whilst the upcoming Defence Investment Plan (DIP) is developed. The Department is working flat out to deliver the DIP, which will be published as soon as possible. The DIP is the first time in 18 years Defence has completed a single, comprehensive review of programmes and is backed by the Government’s largest sustained increase in defence investment since the end of the Cold War, spending £270 billion on defence in this Parliament alone.

21 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

With reference to his Department's press release entitled Cutting-edge drone degree to train military forces of the future unveiled, published on 21 January 2026, what the total cost is of delivering the undergraduate drone degree.

Reply

The Army has provided a one-off payment of £240,000 to the New Model Institute for Technology and Engineering (NMITE) to initiate development of the undergraduate drone degree. This funding enabled NMITE to recruit academic staff and design the course which will offer students the opportunity to learn cutting-edge drones technology driven by lessons from Ukraine. On current plans, the Army intends to sponsor serving-military personnel on the three year degree and multiple personnel on shorter modular courses. These costs will be met through existing Defence personnel development budgets, in line with routine investment in our people through training and apprenticeships. The Army will continue to support personnel undertaking this degree as long as the course remains relevant and no suitable alternative exists elsewhere in the UK. This supports the Army’s wider ambition to upskill hundreds of personnel in drone technology over time. Longer term, the vision is to replicate this model in additional UK locations where there is a strong cluster of military, academia, and the drone industry. NMITE, as the accredited provider, is responsible for funding and delivering the course, including any future cohorts. As NMITE is an independent higher education provider, the Ministry of Defence does not hold details of NMITE’s own operating or delivery costs.

21 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

If he will make an assessment of the potential impact of his timetable to publish the Defence Investment Plan on the procurement of (a) new deep fires munitions and (b) associated enablers.

Reply

Defence continues to manage its capabilities and programmes to ensure they are not unnecessarily impacted or delayed whilst the upcoming Defence Investment Plan (DIP) is developed. The Department is working flat out to deliver the DIP, which will be published as soon as possible. The DIP is the first time in 18 years Defence has completed a single, comprehensive review of programmes and is backed by the Government’s largest sustained increase in defence investment since the end of the Cold War, spending £270 billion on defence in this Parliament alone.

21 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

With reference to his Department's press release entitled Cutting-edge drone degree to train military forces of the future unveiled, published on 21 January 2025, whether the undergraduate drone degree will involve participation in any military exercises.

Reply

The undergraduate drone degree is designed to equip students with the technical skills required to build, upgrade and sustain drone systems, rather than to train them in their operational use. Some elements of the programme will involve students working with industry and defence partners on practical problem solving projects, which may include challenges linked to the operational employment of drones in combat settings. Students on the programme will not participate in military exercises. However, having Army personnel learning alongside civilian students, supported by academic staff and defence contractors, will provide valuable insight into the realities of operating drones in contested environments and supports a collaborative approach to innovation. The course does not provide training in how to operate drones; this is delivered separately through the Army’s existing small Uncrewed Aircraft Systems training pathways. Instead, the degree focuses on ensuring personnel have the technical knowledge and engineering expertise to sustain and adapt drone systems at the pace required by rapidly evolving operational demands, as seen in Ukraine

21 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

If he will make an assessment of the potential impact of his timetable for publishing the Defence Investment Plan on his Department's expenditure plans for the Global Combat Air programme's (a) un-crewed and autonomous collaborative platform elements and (b) related system-of-systems software and digital development.

Reply

Defence continues to manage its capabilities and programmes to ensure they are not unnecessarily impacted or delayed whilst the upcoming Defence Investment Plan (DIP) is developed. The Department is working flat out to deliver the DIP, which will be published as soon as possible. The DIP is the first time in 18 years Defence has completed a single, comprehensive review of programmes and is backed by the Government’s largest sustained increase in defence investment since the end of the Cold War, spending £270 billion on defence in this Parliament alone.

21 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

Pursuant to the Answer of 19 January 2025 to Question 104851 on Ukraine: Defence Equipment, if he will list the vehicles that will be upgraded.

Reply

This Government has allocated £200 million to prepare the UK Armed Forces to deploy as part of the Multinational Force Ukraine. Planning continues at pace; however, it would not be appropriate to provide mission specific detail in relation to any future UK Armed Forces deployment, for reasons of operational security.

21 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

Pursuant to the Answer of 19 January 2025 to Question 104851 on Ukraine: Defence Equipment, if he will list the new counter-drone protection that will be upgraded.

Reply

This Government has allocated £200 million to prepare the UK Armed Forces to deploy as part of the Multinational Force Ukraine. Planning continues at pace; however, it would not be appropriate to provide mission specific detail in relation to any future UK Armed Forces deployment, for reasons of operational security.

21 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

Pursuant to the Answer of 19 January 2025 to Question 104851 on Ukraine: Defence Equipment, if he will list the additional force-protection equipment that will be upgraded.

Reply

This Government has allocated £200 million to prepare the UK Armed Forces to deploy as part of the Multinational Force Ukraine. Planning continues at pace; however, it would not be appropriate to provide mission specific detail in relation to any future UK Armed Forces deployment, for reasons of operational security.

21 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

Pursuant to the Answer of 19 January 2025 to Question 104851 on Ukraine: Defence Equipment, if he will list the communication systems that will be upgraded.

Reply

This Government has allocated £200 million to prepare the UK Armed Forces to deploy as part of the Multinational Force Ukraine. Planning continues at pace; however, it would not be appropriate to provide mission specific detail in relation to any future UK Armed Forces deployment, for reasons of operational security.

20 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

Whether (a) he or (b) his ministerial colleagues have met with representatives from Leonardo UK since 1 November 2025.

Reply

Leonardo is one of Defence’s key suppliers and therefore the Defence Secretary and I continually meet with representatives from the company. Most recently, I met with Leonardo UK CEO, Clive Higgins, on 12 January 2026, and the Secretary of State was due to meet Leonardo on 22 January. The Department continues to have conversations regarding current programmes and wider business interests across the UK.

20 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

How many training exercises have taken place at the British Army Training Unit Suffield in each of the last 10 financial years.

Reply

BATUS continues to be used for both training and experimentation activity. Below are the numbers of training exercises that have taken place at BATUS in each of the last 10 financial years, including the current financial year. 18 Training exercises have taken place in total. Financial YearNumber of Training Exercises2016-1732017-1832018-1922019-2022020-2102021-2202022-2322023-2422024-2522025-262 There is one further training exercise currently scheduled to take place next financial year 2027-27. Future use of BATUS is dependent upon the outcome of the Defence Investment Plan.

20 Jan 2026·Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government·Answered
Asked

Communities and Local Government, what assessment he has made of the significance of a remoteness factor adjustment in the Fair Funding Review for rural areas.

Reply

The government published the Local government finance policy statement 2026-27 to 2028-29 and response to the Fair Funding Review 2.0 on Thursday 20 November, which set out the government's plans to introduce a fairer and evidence-led funding system. The government also published the Provisional Local Government Finance Settlement 2026-2027 to 2028-2029 on Wednesday 17 December 2025. The government is committed to continuing to work closely with the sector. We have now consulted four times on our proposals for reform and we are grateful for the high-quality and constructive responses received from local authorities and sector groups. The government is committed to tackling the issues that matter to rural communities. Our updates will account for local circumstances, including the variation in cost of delivering services, such as between rural and urban areas. More detail can be found in the consultation response document here. As part of this, the government is including a remoteness adjustment within the adult social care formula, as the best evidence we have heard indicates that distance from a major market has an impact on the cost of delivering social care services. We are also including a journey times adjustment, which is within the area cost adjustment applied to all our funding formulas, which accounts for the impact on the cost of labour of the difference in travel times to provide services; and increasing the cap within the home to school transport formula from 20 miles to 50 miles, in recognition that the original distance cap would unfairly penalise authorities who have no choice but to place children further from home. The government is considering the responses received following the consultation of the Provisional Local Government Finance Settlement 2026 to 2027 and will set out a position when the final Settlement is published in early February.

20 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

Whether he plans to increase the British Army's use of the British Army Training Unit Suffield in the (a) current and (b) next Parliament.

Reply

BATUS continues to be used for both training and experimentation activity. Below are the numbers of training exercises that have taken place at BATUS in each of the last 10 financial years, including the current financial year. 18 Training exercises have taken place in total. Financial YearNumber of Training Exercises2016-1732017-1832018-1922019-2022020-2102021-2202022-2322023-2422024-2522025-262 There is one further training exercise currently scheduled to take place next financial year 2027-27. Future use of BATUS is dependent upon the outcome of the Defence Investment Plan.

20 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

How many training exercises will take place at the British Army Training Unit Suffield in (a) the current financial year and (b) the next financial year.

Reply

BATUS continues to be used for both training and experimentation activity. Below are the numbers of training exercises that have taken place at BATUS in each of the last 10 financial years, including the current financial year. 18 Training exercises have taken place in total. Financial YearNumber of Training Exercises2016-1732017-1832018-1922019-2022020-2102021-2202022-2322023-2422024-2522025-262 There is one further training exercise currently scheduled to take place next financial year 2027-27. Future use of BATUS is dependent upon the outcome of the Defence Investment Plan.

20 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

With reference to his Department's press release Britain's fighter jet fleet strengthened in £205 million boost for British jobs, published on 19 January 2026, when he plans to deliver the European Common Radar System Mk2.

Reply

On Monday 19 January 2026 the Ministry for Defence (MOD) announced that they had signed a £205 million, five-year contract extension with the British company QinetiQ. This agreement will deliver essential, specialist technical and engineering support to the UK’s Typhoon fleet and ensure that the Royal Air Force’s primary fighter jet is safe, airworthy, and ready to protect the UK and our NATO allies for years to come. This agreement also includes support that will help the MOD deliver into service the new cutting-edge European Common Radar System (ECRS) Mk2 on RAF Typhoons by the end of this decade.

20 Jan 2026·Treasury·Answered
Asked

What steps her Department has taken to help support Trading Standards services in Suffolk in responding to organised criminal activity linked to the sale of illegal tobacco and vaping products.

Reply

I refer the hon member to the answer on 27 October 2025 to UIN 84365 Electronic Cigarettes and Tobacco: Smuggling. Operation CeCe is a joint UK-wide initiative between HMRC and Trading Standards to target the illicit tobacco trade. Since it began in January 2021, the operation has removed more than 74 million illicit cigarettes, 19,750kg of hand-rolling tobacco and almost 175kg of shisha products from sale [1]. In 2023 new sanctions were introduced to support the work that Trading Standards do at retail level. They allow Trading Standards to make a referral into HMRC in relation to their tobacco seizures. HMRC can then then investigate and issue civil sanctions, including penalties of up to £10,000. At Budget 2025, the Government set out its plans to tackle rogue retailers who breach tobacco and vape regulations, by taking the power in the Tobacco and Vapes Bill to introduce a licensing scheme for retailers to sell tobacco and vape products. This will strengthen enforcement and support legitimate businesses. The government is also legislating to introduce the Vaping Duty Stamps scheme from 1 October 2026, which requires all vaping products manufactured or imported into the UK to have a duty stamp on packaging so illicit products are immediately identifiable. [1] Over £1.4 million in penalties issued as crackdown on illegal tobacco accelerates

20 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

If he will make an assessment of the potential impact of his timetable to publish the Defence Investment Plan on the Global Combat Air Programme.

Reply

Defence continues to manage its capabilities and programmes to ensure they are not unnecessarily impacted or delayed whilst the upcoming Defence Investment Plan (DIP) is developed. The Department is working flat out to deliver the DIP, which will be published as soon as possible. The DIP is the first time in 18 years Defence has completed a single, comprehensive review of programmes and is backed by the Government’s largest sustained increase in defence investment since the end of the Cold War, spending £270 billion on defence in this Parliament alone.

20 Jan 2026·Ministry of Defence·Answered
Asked

If he will make an assessment of the potential impact of his timetable to publish the Defence Investment Plan on the UK defence industry.

Reply

Defence continues to manage its capabilities and programmes to ensure they are not unnecessarily impacted or delayed whilst the upcoming Defence Investment Plan (DIP) is developed. The Department is working flat out to deliver the DIP, which will be published as soon as possible. The DIP is the first time in 18 years Defence has completed a single, comprehensive review of programmes and is backed by the Government’s largest sustained increase in defence investment since the end of the Cold War, spending £270 billion on defence in this Parliament alone.

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