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Australia seeks to rein in defence spending blowouts, delays

By Thomson Reuters Jul 1, 2026 | 11:27 PM

SYDNEY, July 2 (Reuters) – Australia announced changes on Thursday to the way it manages the delivery of defence projects, aiming to curb ​billions of dollars in cost overruns and ‌lengthy delays.

• The government said it would establish a special agency to oversee defence project delivery, overhaul the way project costs are assessed, and streamline decision-making by cutting ‌bureaucracy.

• ​The decision comes as the ⁠country undertakes a major ⁠build up of its military capacity, with projects including the AUKUS nuclear submarine pact, a continuous naval shipbuilding programme and investments to develop ​domestic missile and drone industries.

• “For too long, Defence has struggled to deliver major capability projects ⁠on time and on budget,” ⁠Pat Conroy, minister for defence industry, ​said in a statement.

• In a speech in Canberra ​unveiling the reforms, Conroy described the department’s systems ‌as “broken”.

• “The fact is these systems were designed for a very different world,” he said. “Through these reforms, we’re making sure that when Defence is developing capability projects that we’re setting ⁠them up for success.”

• He said an internal review found the average cost of defence projects increased by 38%, ⁠or A$29 billion ($19.97 ‌billion), from project conception to government ⁠decision.

• “The way Defence was operating had ​become ‌outdated and compromised for at least ​the last ⁠decade,” Conroy said.

• The government in April announced it would raise defence spending to 3% of gross domestic product by 2033 from about 2%.($1 = 1.4520 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Christine Chen in Sydney; Editing by ​Raju Gopalakrishnan)