Senate debates

Thursday, 7 December 2006

Committees

Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Committee; Report

10:28 am

Photo of David JohnstonDavid Johnston (WA, Liberal Party) Share this | Hansard source

I present the report of the Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Committee, Blue water ships: consolidating past achievements, together with the Hansard record of proceedings and documents presented to the committee.

Ordered that the report be printed.

I seek leave to move a motion in relation to the report.

Leave granted.

I move:

That the Senate take note of the report.

This is a very comprehensive report looking into Australia’s capability and capacity to construct bluewater ships for the Royal Australian Navy. Before speaking to the report, may I firstly say a special thank you to the committee secretariat, led by Dr Kathleen Dermody, and also to Ms Lisa Fenn and Dr Richard Grant, who, during the past 12 months, have put an enormous amount of time—into what is a very complex and difficult subject—into preparing what I think is probably the most comprehensive evaluation of Australia’s heavy industrial capability and its capacity to construct large ships that has ever been done.

This comprehensive report looks at the background to naval shipbuilding in Australia, Australia’s capacity to produce large vessels for the Navy, the productivity of Australian naval shipbuilding and repair industry, and the role of state governments and the Commonwealth in assisting that industry. Since the end of the Cold War, the shipbuilding industry right across the world has had to confront many significant challenges, with dwindling demand for naval ships but with increased pressure for more highly sophisticated and expensive systems. Advances in technology are accelerating these changes.

As a nation with an established naval shipbuilding industry, Australia confronts similar problems in sustaining its naval shipbuilding industry. It has been required to address issues created by the fall in demand for ships, the escalating cost of construction and the need to keep pace with advances in technology, as well as the need to develop and retain skilled workers. In a region where there is significant expansion of naval capacity and capability, Australia is looking for an up-to-date naval shipping capability at an affordable price.

The report considers whether Australia’s naval shipbuilding and repair industry can cost-effectively provide the required improved capability at low rates of production. A number of themes dominated the evidence. Over recent decades Australia’s record of the construction of naval vessels has improved quite dramatically. The Anzac class frigate, of which we produced 10, with two for New Zealand, the minehunters and the Collins class submarine, of which we constructed six, are testament to the ability of Australia’s naval shipbuilding industry to produce world-class naval vessels. For example, despite the well-publicised problems with the Collins class submarine, it is now acclaimed and acknowledged as world-class and provides Australia with a technologically, strategically and, may I say, superior asset and deterrent. The recent successes of the Anzacs, the minehunters and the Collins class submarines have established a very solid platform of naval shipbuilding capability comprising, firstly, the prime contractors capable and willing to invest in complex builds and repair projects.

It also includes an extensive and widespread supply network of local industries that have the skills, knowledge, experience and motivation to support the prime contractors. Some are at the cutting edge of world-class developments and are contributing to innovation and driving advances in technology, such as the development of the anechoic tiles for the Collins class submarine, which are substantially unique in reducing noise. All the work is being done by a local Australian firm called CEA, with its high-powered active phased array missile system.

In some cases a defence contract was the stepping stone that set the company on its successful path in opening up export opportunities for further development. A number of naval shipyards located around the Australian coastline have established significant infrastructure. Over many years governments and private enterprise have invested in infrastructure for the naval shipbuilding industry. More recently, there have been substantial investments in infrastructure at Osborne in South Australia and at the Australian Marine Complex at Henderson in my home state of Western Australia. The development of centres of excellence with a common user facility, surrounded by a heavy engineering precinct, point the way forward for the industry.

Australia also has a highly skilled, highly specialised workforce, as required by naval shipbuilding. This base has taken some significant time to develop and is now, more than ever, ready to embark on current and planned projects. Rather than an impediment, forecast labour shortages should be an incentive for innovation and industry investment in training and skills development to ensure that Australia retains and builds on its current knowledge and skills base to support our burgeoning industry.

Built up over time, Australia now has a highly capable naval industrial base that should be preserved and not eroded by short-sightedness or lack of planning. Without doubt, the Australian industry faces challenges, particularly given that overseas countries are unlikely to remove the various forms of assistance, subsidisation and protection that they give to their local naval shipbuilding industries. Put simply, Australia is competing on an unlevel playing field. Even so, the committee found that substantial benefits accrue to an in-country build of future naval ships. Not only does Australia’s naval industrial base have the capacity and potential to contribute to the maintenance of a self-sufficient, self-reliant naval shipbuilding industry but it also contributes in many other ways to Australia’s industrial manufacturing base, the broader economy and Australia’s national defence interest.

To mention just a few of the benefits that accrue from constructing large naval vessels in Australia, I point to the strategic self-reliance for the repair and maintenance of the Navy fleet and commercial shipping. Other benefits include: increased gross domestic product from the capital investment that flows from such projects; enhancement of the labour market; expanded Indigenous research and development, design, production and management capabilities; the acquisition and development of valuable new skills, manufacturing techniques and processes; extensive technology transfers across a broad spectrum of activities; a strengthening belief in Australia’s own capabilities and confidence in its own ability to exploit opportunities as they present themselves; and, finally, an enhanced potential for export.

When taking account of the broad range of factors that are to be considered when acquiring a naval vessel, the committee believes that it is in Australia’s national interest to maintain a viable naval shipbuilding and repair industry here in Australia. This requires a commitment by the government to have Australia’s naval vessels constructed in Australia and for the government and Defence to adopt measures that would ensure that the industry remains efficient, innovative and competitive. The committee, however, was concerned about the lack of data that Defence makes available on its major acquisition projects; thus, it believes that accurate costings on all aspects of a ship’s construction and its through-life support must be done which are measurable, transparent and based on detailed analysis on the best benchmarks available.

The committee suggested that, because of Defence’s dominance in the marketplace, it should recognise and use its influence to assist industry to gain greater efficiencies and perform better. Based on substantial evidence, the committee was of the view that Defence would achieve greater efficiencies through a more coherent and strategic approach to planning. With this in mind, the committee supported the call for a strategic plan that would, in particular, address the peaks and troughs in demand for Australian vessels. The committee rejected the notion that measures cannot be taken to more effectively moderate the fluctuations in demand without adversely affecting Defence capability. Clearly, long-term strategic planning is required to address this problem. The committee also recommended that Defence provide more detail in the Defence Capability Plan and include information that provides a much clearer indication of its future acquisition program and timetable. The committee accepts that the document can only be as good as the quality of the strategic planning it represents, which reinforces the importance of Defence placing the highest priority on strategic planning.

I thank the Prime Minister, the Minister for Defence and the DMO—in particular, Dr Gumley—for supporting the committee in its investigations. We undertook a substantial investigation into commercial shipbuilding in South Korea and naval shipbuilding across the United States, which was greatly edifying in terms of looking at the capacity and capability of our near neighbours. I thank the members of the committee—in particular, Senator Mark Bishop, Senator Hutchins, Senator Trood and Senator Payne—who participated in a very time-consuming and deep investigation into Australia’s capacity to construct and commission large bluewater naval ships.

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