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Australia nuclear submarine deal signals future investment in local defence businesses

Small businesses in the defence industry are closely following a deal between the Australian, US and UK governments that will help Australia build nuclear-powered submarines.
Lois Maskiell
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Prime Minister Scott Morrison. Source: AAP/Lukas Coch.

Small businesses in the defence industry are closely following a deal between the Australian, US and UK governments that will help Australia build nuclear-powered submarines.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said in a statement today that the UK and the US have agreed to a new security partnership called AUKUS, which aims to manage new challenges in the Indo-Pacific region by modernising Australiaโ€™s defence capabilities.

The partnershipโ€™s first initiative will see Australia leverage the US and UKโ€™s military experience to acquire nuclear-powered submarine technology. But the announcement has also cast doubts over the governmentโ€™s $90 billion program with Franceโ€™s Naval Group to acquire 12 new Attack-class submarines.

Horden Wiltshire, chief executive of Acacia Systems and former Submarine Commanding Officer in the Royal Australian Navy, expects the new partnership will lead to more investment in Australiaโ€™s sovereign defence capabilities.

โ€œItโ€™s too early to tell which way itโ€™s going to go but it is good news for businesses if the government continues to invest in sovereign capability,โ€ Wiltshire tells SmartCompany.

Wiltshire says the government is yet to officially announce whether the deal with Franceโ€™s Naval Group has been scrapped, although โ€œeveryone is drawing that conclusionโ€.

As part of the AUKUS partnership, Australia will establish a Nuclear-Powered Submarine Taskforce in the Department of Defence to lead the acquisition of the eight nuclear-powered submarines.

Wiltshire says adding nuclear-powered submarines to the navy will significantly enhance its capability as nuclear power gives vessels speed, increases endurance and removes the need to recharge batteries.

Acacia Systems, a defence software engineering company based in South Australia, has supported the Australian Defence Force for three decades and welcomes the governmentโ€™s new security partnership.

โ€œFrom our perspective, we think this will present many opportunities but it’s still early days,โ€ Wiltshire says.

Wiltshire says government policy over the past five years has sought to benefit thousands of local submarine suppliers, including in the platform systems and combat system supply chains.

โ€œThere has been a real change in government policy and Acacia has certainly been the beneficiary of that change in policy,โ€ he says.