Australia to speed up purchase of sea mines to shore up maritime defence

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

The so-called smart sea mines are designed to differentiate between military targets and other vessels.

The so-called smart sea mines are designed to differentiate between military targets and other vessels.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:

- Australia said on Monday it would accelerate

plans to buy advanced sea mines

to protect its maritime routes and ports from “potential aggressors” amid China’s plans to increase its influence in the Pacific region.

The so-called smart sea mines are designed to differentiate between military targets and other types of ships, a Defence Department spokesman said in a statement.

“(Australia) is accelerating the acquisition of smart sea mines, which will help to secure sea lines of communication and protect Australia’s maritime approaches,” it said. “A modern sea mining capability is a significant deterrent to potential aggressors.”

Though the Defence Department did not specify any further details, a report in The Sydney Morning Herald newspaper on Monday said Canberra would spend up to A$1 billion (S$921 million) to procure the high-tech underwater weapons.

The federal government will soon announce a contract to buy “a substantial number” of sea mines from a European weapons supplier, the report said, citing unidentified defence industry sources.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told ABC television he would not “pre-empt those national security issues”.

“What we need is to make sure we have the best possible defences. So we have looked at missile defence, we’re looking at cyber security, we’re looking at all of these issues,” Mr Albanese said.

China has plans to step up its presence in the Pacific and

entered a security pact with the Solomon Islands in 2022.

That move raised concerns in the United States and Australia, which for decades have seen the region as their sphere of influence.

Australia has been looking to boost its defence spending over the past few years, including entering into a deal in 2021 to buy nuclear submarines from the United States and Britain. REUTERS

See more on