House debates
Monday, 9 September 2024
Questions without Notice
Aukus
2:36 pm
Tania Lawrence (Hasluck, Australian Labor Party) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
My question is to the Deputy Prime Minister. How is the Albanese Labor government preparing a capable, AUKUS-ready workforce in the west, and how does this differ to other plans?
Richard Marles (Corio, Australian Labor Party, Minister for Defence) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
I thank the member for her question and acknowledge her service. Right now, the USS Hawaii, a Virginia class submarine, is undergoing intermediate-level maintenance at HMAS Stirling, at Rockingham, Western Australia. This is the first time that an American nuclear powered submarine has undergone maintenance outside of the US or a US base, and it's also the first time that non-US citizens have participated in the maintenance of such a submarine. This is a very significant moment.
As Australia evolves its capacity to operate Virginia class submarines and indeed its future submarines from HMAS Stirling, as it establishes the Submarine Rotational Force-West, a critical element of this will be building its ability to engage in the maintenance of these submarines in increasing complexity. That journey really starts with the USS Hawaii. It really is the biggest AUKUS moment this year.
On Monday, the Prime Minister and I were at HMAS Stirling, and we met American and Australian naval personnel working together on this project. We also met a number of employees of ASC, because this is a great opportunity for Western Australian defence industry. In time, we will see thousands of jobs created in Western Australia's naval industry, and it is why the government announced that we will be funding an additional 200 entry-level positions over the next two years at ASC—graduates, trainees and apprentices—so that ASC can have the skilled workforce that it needs but so, at the same time, this great opportunity can be presented to young Western Australians; it's jobs for subs.
AUKUS is happening. Real jobs are now being created, real progress is now being made and real capability is now being built. This is such a contrast to the thought bubble that we inherited from those opposite. When the Liberals were in government, they opened up a 10-year submarine capability gap, and right now that gap is being closed, as we speak, at HMAS Stirling. While the Liberals were all about defence hoopla, the Albanese Labor government is all about real defence action.
Andrew Hastie (Canning, Liberal Party, Shadow Minister for Defence) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
On indulgence, Speaker—
Milton Dick (Speaker) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
No. That's not how indulgence works. I give the call to the honourable member for Hume.