A $60 million joint investment between the Albanese and Malinauskas governments has been announced for a new defence academy at Adelaide’s Lot Fourteen.
The Australian Defence Technologies Academy is expected to open in 2026, providing digital training, education and research crucial for the defence industry in South Australia.
The new Adelaide University will operate the academy under an agreement signed between the Government of South Australia, University of Adelaide and the University of South Australia.
Premier Peter Malinauskas said the academy required “a lot of collaboration” between the state and federal government and Adelaide universities.
“That collaboration is essential to us being able to develop the workforce, the thousands of young people that are going to work on the AUKUS submarines, but also work on other defence opportunities within our state,” he said.
“The Defence Training Academy has at its core a research capability to train the workforce that we know the state is desperately in need of.”
Co-vice chancellors of Adelaide University Peter Høj and David Lloyd said the academy signalled the role of the new university as a “national leader for defence and national security research and education”.
“The Advanced Defence Technologies Training Academy will be unique in Australia. It will offer new fit-for-purpose premises which universities do not currently have access to,” they said.
“South Australia’s role as a trusted partner in a dynamic world is underpinned by a commitment to research in partnership with industry, ensuring that students at all levels experience the latest thinking and technology innovations.”
The academy is funded through the Adelaide City Deal, a ten-year deal created under the Morrison and Marshall governments to create “jobs of the future”, boost the population, and enhance cultural experiences “by generating greater opportunities in Adelaide’s robust visitor economy”.
Signed in 2019, the deal planned to deliver $551 million to South Australian through joint investment, with $174 million to come from the federal government, $364 million from the state government and $12.6 million from the City of Adelaide.
Federal infrastructure, transport, regional development and local government minister Catherine King said the academy would “create a global hub for the defence industry and position Lot Fourteen as a world-class innovation hub”.
“The Australian Defence Technologies Academy will not only benefit South Australia, but all of Australia, by enhancing the supply of knowledge and human capital central to strengthen our sovereign capabilities and interests as a nation,” King said.
Home to 103 organisations and 61 start-ups, Lot Fourteen has seen $753 million of state and federal government investment.
The news comes after a $6 million investment into artificial intelligence research and development at the Australian Institute for Machine Learning was announced last week.