• Ocius Technology, CTD program success story with their autonomous Bluebottle USV will participate in the maritime domain project lead by Thales Australia.  Credit: ADM Patrick Durrant
    Ocius Technology, CTD program success story with their autonomous Bluebottle USV will participate in the maritime domain project lead by Thales Australia. Credit: ADM Patrick Durrant
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The first Defence Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) for Trusted Autonomous Systems has been formed with inaugural participating members BAE Systems Australia, RMIT University, DefendTex and the Department of Defence, represented by DST Group.

Defence Industry Minister Christopher Pyne said the Defence CRC is being set up under the Next Generation Technologies Fund, with $50 million invested over seven years to deliver trustworthy smart-machine technologies for new defence capabilities based on advanced human-machine teaming concepts.

“The Defence CRC establishment is based on a sound formation plan developed by Chair Jim McDowell, in collaboration with a panel of independent experienced experts from industry, academia, Defence and the UK Defence Science and Technology Laboratory.”

The expert panel included former Australian Chief Scientist Ian Chubb, Professor Hugh Durrant-Whyte, the UK Defence Ministry’s Chief Science Adviser, Air Vice Marshall Neil Hart (Retd), and Paul Merrow, former CEO of GD Defence Australia.

“Additional companies and universities will join as participating members and research partners as the Defence CRC grows and takes on more projects,” Minister Pyne said.

“Initially, there will be three Defence CRC research projects led by BAE Systems, Thales Australia and Lockheed Martin in the land, maritime and aerospace domains.”

Minister Pyne also announced that as the outcome of a competitive process the headquarters of the Defence CRC for Trusted Autonomous Systems will be located in Queensland.

“Ongoing discussions are also taking place with Boeing Australia and Data61 for their future involvement in the Defence CRC for Trusted Autonomous Systems. 

“I look forward to the first Defence CRC making a significant impact on capability with advances in autonomous systems.”   

McDowell said it had been a good start to rapidly form a Defence CRC with a totally novel formation process and to do it on schedule.

“Our focus as we move forward will be Industry led projects with real translation opportunities to move technology rapidly from universities into industry and ultimately into leading edge capability for the Australian Defence Force.”

Defence CRC for Trusted Autonomous Systems

Project Leads and Partners

Maritime Domain – Littoral Operations

Lead

Thales Australia

Partners

Mission Systems (SME), Flinders University

Other participants

Austal – Biotech Engineering (SME), Ineni Realtime (SME),
Curtin University, University of Western Australia

Fugro LADS Corporation

Ocius (SME) – University of New South Wales

University of Sydney

Queensland Institute of Technology

DST Group

           

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Land Domain – Networked Autonomy

Lead

BAE Systems Australia

Partners

DST Group, University of Melbourne

Other participants

DefendTex – Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, Flinders University, University of Melbourne, University of Adelaide, DST Group

Tectonica – Rheinmetall Defence, University of Melbourne, DST Group

Marathon Targets (SME) – University of Sydney

Simbiant (SME) – My Sky Technologies (SME), DST Group

Queensland Institute of Technology

Deakin University

University of Technology Sydney

University of Melbourne

DST Group

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Air-Space Domain – Persistent Autonomy

Lead

Lockheed Martin Australia

Partners

Biarri (SME), Consilium (SME), DST Group, University of Melbourne, University of Adelaide

Other participants

Consunet (SME)

KJR (SME) – Griffith University

University of Adelaide

University of Melbourne

Australian National University

DST Group

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Potential Project Partners and CRC Members

Industry:       Saab, Boeing, Insitu Pacific, Northrup Grumman, Acacia, AOS Group

Universities:            University of South Australia, University of Queensland, Flinders University, University of New South Wales

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