Page 27 - Australian Defence Mag Jul-Aug 2020
P. 27

   JULY/AUGUST 2020 | WWW.AUSTRALIANDEFENCE.COM.AU
SURVEILLANCE IN LAND DOMAIN
LAND 129 27
   COMMONWEALTH COMMITS TO THIRD TRITON
 Australia has committed to the purchase of an additional Northrop Grumman MQ-4C Triton Remotely Piloted Aircraft System.
Minister for Defence Linda Reynolds said the Triton acquisition is an important part of protecting Australia’s borders and making the region more secure.
“Once in service, this capability will significantly enhance our ability to persistently patrol Australia’s maritime approaches from the North, in the South West Pacific and down to Antarctica,” Minister Reynolds said.
“The fleet is being developed and purchased through a Cooperative Program with the US Navy. This Program strengthens our ability to develop advanced maritime surveillance capability and ensure our capabilities remain complementary with our security partners, while sharing in the benefits of their technical expertise and project costs.
“Our membership of the Cooperative Program gives us the confidence to acquire our third Triton. We will continue to work closely with the US to assure our future capability.”
“Over $475 million is set to be spent locally, with several Australian companies already completing Triton production work for Northrop Grumman Corporation,” Minister Reynolds said.
The commitment comes several months after US budget papers announced a ‘production pause’ of the Triton in FY 2021 and 2022 and “[deferred] further procurement of the Multi-INT configuration until FY 2023.” The funding could instead be directed towards the Trump administration’s border wall, which tapped into the Pentagon’s budget after neither Mexico nor Congress would pay the full cost.
“Defence is aware of the US Administration’s budget request to Congress, which includes a proposed pause on Triton production funding for two years until 2023. It is important to note that this request is not the final US Defense budget,” a Defence spokesperson said to ADM at the time. “The Department is working closely with both the US Navy and Northrop Grumman to understand impacts on the Australia’s Maritime Patrol Program.”
The single platform purchase also stymies Northrop Grumman’s hopes for Australia to buy the next lot of Tritons in a single tranche.
In February, Chris Deeble, CEO of Northrop Grumman Australia, said to ADM: “We also hope that we get the next tranche of four remaining aircraft, a
total of six approved,
at the start of next year
by Government, and by
doing that we think there
will be some advantages,
including cost savings and
industry opportunities,
that we will be able to
leverage by getting all of
the aircraft agreed in that
next tranche.”
RIGHT: Based on the Global Hawk family, Triton will partner with the P8A for ISR missions.
       LEFT: The Scaneagle 2 is known as the Blackjack in service with the US Marine Corp.
 about this at present,” Faulkner explained. Citing Leidos’ integration strengths, Faulkner pointed to the company’s selec- tion in May to develop a software solution for the US Army’s Unmanned Aircraft Sys-
tem Ground Control – Version 4.
In the same month Leidos announced it would perform much of the systems integra- tion work in teaming with Paramount USA and Vertex Aerospace to offer the Bronco II – a derivative of the South African Advanced High Performance Reconnaissance Light Aircraft (AHRLAC) – to the US Special Op- erations Command (SOCOM) for that ser-
vice’s Armed Overwatch requirement. Further, last September the company was contracted by the US Army to provide air- craft intelligence, surveillance, and recon- naissance (ISR) support services, and earli- er this year Leidos acquired the US defence technology company Dynetics (for US$1.65 billion) whose areas of expertise include
autonomy and advanced sensors.
This type of skill and experience would
be vital in meeting what Leidos foresaw as the future challenge of integrating new or
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