Australian Government invests $14m in defence technology

Posted on 18 Sep 2015 by Tim Brown

Seven Australian organisations will receive Australian Government funding of $14.2 million to develop and demonstrate innovative technologies that can enhance defence capability.

The Australian Government funding is made available under the Capability and Demonstrator Program managed by the Defence Science and Technology Group.

Seven technology proposals from Australian companies, universities and science organisations have been selected this year to demonstrate possible defence application.

These proposals have the potential to advance Defence capability, produce innovative products for Defence and civilian use, and stimulate Australian industry growth.

This year’s successful proposals include:

  • a low profile body armour for better soldier protection;
  • a miniaturised wide-band, low-noise radio frequency antenna;
  • mobile x-ray imagers for use during field deployments and detecting improvised explosive devices;
  • a stealthy unmanned surface vessel to track submarines and torpedoes;
  • a tactile flight display that improves helicopter safety in poor visibility and threat environments;
  • technology to securely transmit three-dimensional geospatial data to ships at sea; and
  • a low-cost, high-G centrifuge for simulators used in pilot training.

The successful proposals were submitted by Armor Composite Engineering, CSIRO, Micro-X Pty Ltd, Ocius Technology, University of Canberra, the Bureau of Meteorology and Deakin University.

Minister for Defence, the Hon. Kevin Andrews MP said: “I congratulate all those involved in putting forward proposals and supporting innovative research and development for defence applications.”

Since the Capability and Technology Demonstrator Program began, Defence has invested $270 million in 118 projects, half of them proposed by small-to-medium enterprises.

Of these, 104 projects have successfully demonstrated the feasibility of their technologies.

Mr Andrews said he believed these results were very good considering the high risk nature of the research and development projects.