Eyes on the sea: Companies compete for Australian maritime surveillance contract
AVALON, AUSTRALIA: Major global defence contractors want to sell Australia on cutting- edge technology such as high-altitude, solar- electric powered drones and optionally manned aircraft to keep an eye on the oceans.
Airbus SE, Italy’s Leonardo SpA, Northrop Grumman Corp and Lockheed Martin Corp are among the companies that have expressed interest in providing Australia’s Department of Home Affairs with such equipment, showcased at the Australian International Airshow last week.
The four companies said they have responded to a request for information issued late last year; the next step, after the government responds, would be to submit proposals.
The final contracts could be worth several hundred millions dollars depending on the scope, according to two industry sources who declined to be named because they were not authorised to speak to the media.
The country is looking to replace 10 Bombardier Inc Dash 8 maritime patrol turboprops that began service more than a decade ago.
Australia has the world’s thirdlargest economic exclusion zone behind France and the United States, and the world’s largest maritime search and rescue region, covering about 10 per cent of the Earth’s surface.
Australia faces smuggling of people, drugs and weapons; illegal fishing; and search and rescue at sea, making it an ideal market for sophisticated aerial surveillance technology.
“What works for large merchant ships or naval formations may not work for a tiny wooden vessel moving at slow speed with no electronic signature,” said James Goldrick, a retired rear admiral in the Royal Australian Navy and former border protection commander.
The government aims to have all of the new equipment operating by 2024, the department said when it announced the request for information in late October.
A Home Affairs spokesman said on Friday that the government got 67 responses from industry by the end of November, and that no decision had been made on next steps.
Minister for Home Affairs Peter Dutton, who oversees the Australian Border Force, said in October the contract would be a “very significant investment” without providing further details.
An election is due to be held by May and the opposition Labor Party is favoured in polls, but Goldrick said he expected any incoming government would issue requests for proposals.
The Home Affairs contract would build on Australia’s military capabilities, including seven Boeing Co P- 8A Poseidon submarine-hunting jets.
Five more P- 8As have been ordered.
Last year, Australia ordered six Northrop Grumman Triton maritime surveillance drones, which will cost A$ 6.9 billion ( US$ 4.90 billion) in total, according to a person familiar with the transaction. — Reuters