From wildfire containment and precision agriculture to infrastructure inspection, Drone as a First Responder programs, and a vast array of defense applications, uncrewed and autonomous systems are indispensable in today’s real-world operational environments. These technologies safely reduce risk, expand reach, and deliver real-time capabilities. Yet despite their potential, the domestic autonomy industry has struggled to scale. The reason has not been a lack of innovation. It has been a lack of sustained, strategic investment.
That began to change with the signing of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (H.R. 1). After years of patchwork efforts and short-term pilot programs, the United States has now committed over $20 billion to the development, integration, and production of autonomous capabilities. This legislation is more than a funding mechanism. It signals that the U.S. is prepared to compete in a world where autonomy is increasingly shaping outcomes across defense, the economy, and essential public services.
The question now is not whether the resources exist. It is whether those resources will be spent in a way that meets the moment.
What makes this investment so important is that it reflects a more integrated vision for autonomy. Autonomy is not confined to a single platform or domain. It is a set of capabilities that can be applied across air, land, and sea. Whether it is a naval vessel conducting surveillance without putting sailors in harm’s way, a small drone identifying wildfire risks in hard-to-reach terrain, or a robot conducting public safety operations, the core technologies are often the same.
These systems reduce risk where it matters most, which is why their value across civil, commercial, and military missions is undeniable. After all, robots don’t bleed.
By treating autonomy as a flexible, scalable system architecture, this new federally authorized funding positions the U.S. to integrate new technologies more quickly and at lower cost. It supports AI development for both aerial and maritime systems, strengthens production of low-cost autonomous platforms, and reinforces the component supply chains needed to sustain them. It also expands counter-drone capabilities to address the growing threat of low-cost, commercially available drones from adversary-aligned suppliers. Most importantly, it enables the U.S. government, particularly the Department of Defense, to become a better customer by providing industry with the consistent procurement and market stability needed to scale production, reduce costs, and compete more effectively both domestically and globally.
These are not isolated wins. They reflect a more integrated vision, one that links autonomy to mission readiness, supply chain resilience, and operational advantage.
The legislation also begins to address critical infrastructure gaps. A $12 billion investment in air traffic control modernization lays the foundation for safely scaling the integration of advanced aviation into the national airspace while reducing reliance on outdated systems and technologies that are well beyond their useful life. New support for test infrastructure, including a new proving ground for robotic autonomous systems, will help validate performance and shape policy. At the state and local level, $500 million in funding will expand detection and tracking capabilities near critical infrastructure, supporting public safety and emergency response operations.
Funding is, however, only the starting point. The impact of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act will depend entirely on how well agencies follow through with implementation. To deliver on the full promise of this legislation, agencies must adopt acquisition strategies that level the playing field for both emerging and established vendors. That means breaking down barriers to entry, adopting flexible contracting authorities, and avoiding duplicative requirements that sideline new entrants to the market. Procurement efforts must emphasize open architectures, modularity, and supply chain security. Congress must exercise active oversight and push for accountability in how funds are deployed and spent, keeping transparency and access top of mind.
And there is more work ahead. The forthcoming FY 2026 National Defense Authorization Act presents a vital opportunity to build on this momentum. Ensuring autonomy reaches operational scale will require Congress to close persistent gaps in validation, align regulations across agencies, and unify procurement standards. Without coordinated action, the momentum from this legislation could quickly stall.
This is not just a matter of technology. It is a matter of national security and competitiveness. Other nations, particularly the People’s Republic of China, are not waiting to act. They are investing heavily in autonomous systems and capturing global markets through subsidized production and export scale. The United States must respond not just with capital, but with coordination and clarity of purpose.
For the uncrewed systems, robotics, and autonomy industries, this is a turning point. The funding is substantial, but the strategy and policy behind it matter even more. Autonomy is an operational imperative, and one that Congress has now backed with real capital.
Michael Robbins is the President & CEO of the Association for Uncrewed Vehicle System International (AUVSI).