Federal Minister for Defence, Peter Dutton. Source: Peter Dutton [Twitter]
The Market Online - At The Bell

Join our daily newsletter At The Bell to receive exclusive market insights

  • Australia’s Department of Defence looks to update and upgrade its space technology to ensure it has appropriate space electronic warfare capability
  • The department says upgrading Australia’s space tech would provide capabilities “essential for 21st-century military operations”
  • It follows the 2020 Defence Strategic Update wherein the department stressed the importance of keeping space tech up to date
  • Battle management, tracking, communications support and navigation seem to be the core focusses of global upgrades to space technology
  • The Department of Defence says space electronic warfare capability will not create debris or damage the space environment

Australia’s Department of Defence is looking to update and upgrade its space technology to ensure it has appropriate space electronic warfare capability.

The department highlighted the importance of space tech to Australia’s national security in the 2020 Defence Strategic Update, with the Australian Space Agency and Defence Force working together to “transform the way the ADF operates in space”.

The government flagged a potential $7 billion worth of investment into space services and space control to ensure Australia doesn’t fall behind other countries in space defence systems.

Today, the defence department said it has launched Defence Project 9358, which is designed to explore options for the “acquisition of a ground-based space electronic warfare capability”.

“The capability would help assure Australia’s continued access to space-based communications, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance,” the department said in a statement.

Of course, this space warfare capability does not mean battles will be fought in outer space; the reality is much less sci-fi.

For example, in March 2019, the United States established its own Space Development Agency (SDA) organisation to work together with the US Air Force’s Space and Missile Systems Centre.

The purpose of the SDA was to revamp the States’ space architecture and dramatically increase the country’s satellites in orbit by 2026. This means on-ground missions and army work would have unmatched assistance from space, ranging from battle management and tracking to communications support and navigation.

The US SDA is designed to speed up the time and lower the costs of producing and launching space architecture.

While the details of Australia’s new space electronic warfare plans are still to be revealed, the Department of Defence stressed in its 2020 update that space tech provides capabilities for situation awareness, real-time communication, and information gathering that are “essential for 21st-century military operations”.

The department said space electronic warfare capability will not create debris or damage the space environment, and Australia will work to promote international norms, transparency, and cooperation in upholding responsible behaviour in space.

More From The Market Online

Bullock: Hold call doesn’t rule out further tightening, if that’s required to beat inflation

Michele Bullock has made it very clear that the Reserve Bank is still strongly considering more rate hikes, especially if it’s the only

Reserve Bank holds rates at 4.35% as inflation battle drags on

The Reserve Bank has left the cash rate unchanged at 4.35%, warning inflation remains too high…
Global trade disruption concept with container ships blocked from entering or exiting the Strait of Hormuz. Maritime blockade and geopolitical tension affecting international supply chain and shipping routes.

Markets rally, ASX surges as US-Iran strike preliminary deal to reopen Strait of Hormuz

Australian shares rallied after the US and Iran confirmed a landmark ceasefire agreement, lifting miners, banks…
Close-up view of erupting molten lava, showcasing the intense heat and dynamic nature of volcanic activity.

Records up top, energy melt down, all eyes back on rech

Records on top. Regime turn underneath. Three U.S. indices closed at record highs into a holiday-shortened week. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index ripped +5.53%...