The Advanced Strategic Capabilities Accelerator has signed 21 contracts as part of an investment of more than $60 million with Australian universities and industry partners.
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The contracts, made under ASCA's Emerging and Disruptive Technologies program, aims to back local innovation in quantum and counter disinformation technologies.
The investment gives effect to innovation priorities in the National Defence Strategy and Asymmetric Advantage – Delivering More, Together, the Defence Innovation, Science and Technology Strategy.
“Through the Advanced Strategic Capabilities Accelerator, the Government is driving cutting-edge research and development and capability delivery that is aligned with Defence priorities and a future made in Australia,” according to Minister for Defence Industry and Capability Delivery, Pat Conroy.
“In uncertain strategic circumstances, we must harness our national ingenuity and technology advances to deter hostile acts against Australia and in our region.
“Defence is working with industry and research partners to develop solutions that can provide our soldiers, sailors and aviators with an asymmetric advantage on the battlefield.”
The EDT program is pushing scientific knowledge to advance the development of existing and new capabilities that help deter hostile acts against Australia and in the region.
Contracted companies and universities include Analog Quantum Circuits, Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisations, Consunet Pty Ltd, DeteQt Pty Ltd, Diamond Defence, Infleqtion (Cold Quanta), Monash University, Nomad Atomics, Q-CTRL Pty Ltd, QuantX Labs, Lockheed Martin Australia, University of Adelaide, University of New South Wales, University of Technology Sydney, University of South Australia and the University of Western Australia.
The recipients include Analog Quantum Circuits in QLD (which designs and fabricates superconducting devices for quantum computing), Consunet Pty Ltd in South Australia (which works on capabilities in electromagnetic warfare and spectrum management), Nomad Atomics in Victoria (which specialises in the development of high precision quantum sensors) and Q-CTRL Pty Ltd in NSW (which is seeking to solve the hardest problems facing quantum technology, improving hardware performance and accelerating pathways to useful quantum computers and other technologies).
A total of 179 proposals from across the national science and technology ecosystem were received as part of this call-out for EDT proposals. ASCA is seeking innovative proposals that can support decision advantage for its next EDT program.