The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Govt to establish research institute to boost defense technology

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

The government plans to establish a research institute in scal 2024 at the earliest to utilize cutting-edge technologi­es developed by the private sector in the defense eld, according to government sources.

e new institute, which will be part of the Acquisitio­n, Technology and Logistics Agency, will identify research in technologi­es expected to be vital to the future of warfare, in such elds as arti cial intelligen­ce and unmanned aerial vehicles.

e institute will aim to link research on advanced technologi­es that can be used for both defense and civilian purposes in the developmen­t of equipment.

Active use of advanced technologi­es for both military and civilian purposes is common overseas, but a sense of aversion to the defense eld persists in Japanese academic circles.

Because public-private research cooperatio­n has not made as much progress in Japan, compared to the United States, China and other countries, the government decided a specialize­d organizati­on backed by the state was needed to make up the gap.

e new institute will be modeled a er the U.S. Department of Defense’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and Defense Innovation Unit (DIU).

e roots of the internet and the Global Positionin­g System can be traced back to DARPA, which has been involved in supporting the kind of highrisk research that struggles to attract private investment.

e DIU has served as a bridge between the U.S. Department of Defense and the private sector, contributi­ng to the discovery of civilian technologi­es utilized in the cyber

eld and unmanned aerial vehicles.

e new institute is expected to provide medium- to longterm research funding to a wide range of companies, research institutes and universiti­es — from large corporatio­ns to start-ups.

In addition to public solicitati­ons, there are expectatio­ns that the private sector will also approach the institutio­n for support. e goal is to provide support amounting to about ¥1 trillion annually.

e Acquisitio­n, Technology and Logistics Agency’s national security technology research promotion program subsidizes private-sector research, but its budget is only about ¥10 billion per year, and the period of the subsidy is usually limited to two or three years.

As the program has not achieved any signi cant results, the new research institute is expected to provide support over a longer period.

Priority elds for support will include AI, drones, quantum technology and electromag­netic waves. e United States and China are ercely competing for dominance in these elds, which have the potential to drasticall­y change warfare.

e government intends to focus on technologi­cal developmen­t to strengthen the deterrence of the Japan-U.S. alliance.

e agency will have technical o cers who will serve as project managers, responsibl­e for research plans, budgets and quality control, and providing advice to researcher­s. Some of the project managers are expected to be appointed from the private sector.

e technical o cers will also seek out research that has the potential to be commercial­ized at an early stage and lobby for support, serving as liaisons between the agency and major companies in defense industries to realize mass production of equipment. (Oct. 20)

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