London: Germany ​is funding 50,000 attack drones for Ukraine, a source familiar with the matter said, in an order that marks one of the biggest known purchases of drones for Kyiv by a Western government.Ukraine has ‌relied heavily ⁠on a ⁠range of unmanned vehicles during the more than four-year-old war against Russia, and it is producing millions of ​drones annually as Ukrainian forces conduct thousands of drone strikes each day.The attack drone order involves ​Shrike first-person-view (FPV) drones made by major Ukrainian manufacturer SkyFall and equipped with software from U.S. defence technology firm Auterion designed to autonomously track and hit moving targets in the ​final phase of the flight.Read more: Germany pledges big military aid package to Ukraine as Kyiv puts 2026 defense needs at $120 billionAuterion CEO Lorenz Meier ⁠confirmed the size ‌of the contract, adding that it was worth about €90 million ($103 million) ​and was funded ​by a European country. Meier told Reuters some of the drones ⁠had already been delivered to Ukraine's government with the rest ​due for dispatch this year.SkyFall confirmed Germany's involvement, but said ​the company could not comment on the details of the purchase.Germany's Defence Ministry declined to comment, citing operational security.Ukraine's Defence Ministry also declined to comment.Read more:US license could let Ukraine produce Patriot missiles, but it won't be simple or quickSHRIKE CATCHES PENTAGON'S EYEThe Shrike, a low-cost drone that has been deployed in Ukraine since 2023, recently gained prominence overseas.A version called Shrike 10-F produced by SkyFall with UK company Skycutter ‌recently topped the leaderboard in the first round of a Pentagon-run competition as part of a $1.1 billion initiative to buy hundreds of thousands of ​one-way attack drones. ​Auterion said its software ⁠was being used in several entries in the competition.Meier said Auterion was helping to supply a total of 100,000 drones for Ukraine this year in partnership with different hardware makers, ​funded by several Western governments.That also includes a $50 million Pentagon contract to provide 33,000 drones, which he said have been delivered to Ukraine.Last month, Britain said it would provide 150,000 drones to Ukraine this year as part of a broader £752 million ($1.01 billion) funding package. ($1 = 0.8762 euros) ($1 = 0.7460 pounds)