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Australia delays defence projects amid cost overruns

Created at 2 Jul · 4:29 AM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

Australia is implementing changes to its defence project management to curb billions in cost overruns and delays. A new agency will oversee delivery, cost assessments will be overhauled, and decision-making streamlined.

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Key Numbers

38%average cost increase for defence projects
A$29 billioncost overrun from project conception to decision
$19.97 billioncost overrun from project conception to decision
3%target defence spending as % of GDP by 2033
2%current defence spending as % of GDP
1.4520Australian dollars per US dollar

Who's Involved

Pat Conroy
Australia's minister for defence industry
Australia
country implementing defence spending reforms

↳ Why This Matters

The reforms aim to ensure that Australia's substantial investments in its military capabilities are delivered efficiently and within budget, supporting its strategic defence objectives amidst a period of significant military build-up.

Key facts

  • Australia is reforming its defence project management to address significant cost overruns and delays.
  • A new agency will be created to oversee the delivery of defence projects.
  • The reforms aim to streamline decision-making and overhaul cost assessment processes.
  • An internal review revealed average defence project costs increased by A$29 billion from conception to government decision.
  • Australia plans to increase defence spending to 3% of GDP by 2033.

Australia is overhauling its defence project management systems to tackle billions of dollars in cost blowouts and lengthy delays. The government announced on Thursday that it will establish a dedicated agency to oversee the delivery of defence projects, reform how project costs are assessed, and streamline decision-making processes by reducing bureaucracy.

These reforms come as Australia is significantly increasing its military capacity, with major projects including the AUKUS nuclear submarine pact, a continuous naval shipbuilding program, and investments in domestic missile and drone industries.

Minister for Defence Industry Pat Conroy stated that Defence has "struggled to deliver major capability projects on time and on budget" and described the department's systems as "broken" and "outdated." An internal review found that the average cost of defence projects increased by 38%, or A$29 billion ($19.97 billion), from the initial conception to the government's final decision.

The Australian government previously announced in April its intention to raise defence spending to 3% of gross domestic product by 2033, up from the current approximately 2%.

Frequently asked questions

The main goal is to curb billions of dollars in cost overruns and lengthy delays in defence projects.

A special agency will be established to oversee project delivery, cost assessments will be overhauled, and decision-making will be streamlined.

An internal review found that the average cost of defence projects increased by 38%, or A$29 billion ($19.97 billion).

Australia aims to raise defence spending to 3% of its gross domestic product by 2033.

What Happens Next

01The new agency will begin overseeing defence project delivery.
02Cost assessment methodologies will be updated.
03Decision-making processes will be streamlined.

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Cadence

How It Developed

Australia announced changes to defence project management to curb cost overruns and delays.
A new agency will be established to oversee defence project delivery.
Project cost assessments will be overhauled and decision-making streamlined.
An internal review found average defence project costs increased by 38% or A$29 billion.
Defence spending is set to rise to 3% of GDP by 2033.

Sources

T1
Australia seeks to rein in defence spending blowouts, delaysReuters

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