Australia, Britain, US drop defence trade barriers to propel Aukus
Sign up now: Get insights on Asia's fast-moving developments
Australia, Britain and the US are developing advanced defence technology such as hypersonic missiles and undersea drones.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Follow topic:
SYDNEY - Australia, the US and Britain have removed significant barriers on defence trade between the Aukus partners and opened the way for faster approvals for highly sensitive technologies, Australian officials said.
The move is seen as a significant step for Australia to acquire US nuclear-powered attack submarines
The Aukus partners are also developing advanced defence technology
The US is Australia’s closest security ally, but had restricted sharing of closely guarded defence technology, which is governed by the US International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR).
There had been delays by the US State Department in finalising exemptions for Australia and Britain under ITAR, which required the Aukus partners to show they had export control regimes equivalent to those of the US.
Eliminating the need for export licences for much defence technology will take effect from Sept 1, Australian officials said on Aug 15, with Defence Minister Richard Marles calling it a “generational change”.
"These critical reforms will revolutionise defence trade, innovation and cooperation, enabling collaboration at the speed and scale required to meet our challenging strategic circumstances," he said in a statement.
The US issues around 3,800 defence export control licences for Australia each year, which have taken up to 18 months to approve, while approvals in Britain have taken 100 days.
From September, 70 per cent of defence exports from the US to Australia previously under ITAR will be licence free.
An excluded technologies list will be released by the US showing sensitive technologies that will continue to require a licence, to be reviewed annually.
The US State Department will have a 45-day window to decide on the transfer of technologies on the excluded list between governments and industry, and 30 days for government-to-government transfers.
More than 80 per cent of goods subject to control by the US Commerce Department as “dual-use” military and civilian technologies will also become licence free for Australia from September.
Australia has eliminated 900 export permits on defence goods worth A$5 billion (S$4.3 billion) to the US and Britain, officials said.
Under a deal signed in 2021, the US will sell Australia between three and five Virginia-class attack submarines from the early 2030s as a stopgap, while Australia and Britain build a new SSN-Aukus class that will include US technologies, due roughly a decade later. REUTERS

