NIOA wins first phase of LAND 159 Lethality Systems Project
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Queensland-based NIOA has won the first stage of the LAND 159 Lethality Systems Project that will replace and modernise 26 weapons systems used by the Australian Defence Force.
FILE PHOTO: Australian soldier Private Anthony Brown conducts a range shoot with the EF-88 Austeyr rifle at the Taji Military Complex, Iraq. Photo by Able Seaman Chris Beerens.
READ OUR GEAR INSIDER’S VIEWS ON THE LIMITATIONS OF THIS PROJECT
Project LAND 159, to be delivered in three tranches over the next decade, will equip the men and women of the ADF with next-generation pistols, assault rifles, machine guns, sniper rifles, direct-fire support weapons and munitions.
Under this initial contract, valued at more than $7 million, NIOA will approach the market with a view to test and evaluate weapon systems to provide recommendations to Defence in an open, impartial and transparent manner.
Subject to business-case approval, some of the ammunition for the program will be manufactured at the Commonwealth government-owned Benalla plant in regional Victoria where NIOA has a co-tenancy, while project offices have been set up in Melbourne and Canberra.
NIOA is Australia’s largest privately-owned company supplying weapons, ammunition and technical support to military, law enforcement and commercial markets.
NIOA CEO Robert Nioa said the appointment of an Australian-owned company presented a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to support the nation’s servicemen and women while delivering genuine sovereign capability.
“For NIOA, the LAND 159 program is all about the next generation in every way,” Mr Nioa said.
“The next generation of weapon systems, the next generation of Australia’s defence industry and, most importantly, the next generation of the ADF.
“The work of these young men and women will be entrusted to us by their families and the nation.
“Their safety, and their ability to successfully complete their missions is of the utmost importance and NIOA will play a role in ensuring that they have the best equipment possible.’’
Central to the successful NIOA bid was the engagement of Australian businesses in the supply chain underpinned by a longer-term vision to become a global exporter to allied defence forces around the world.
“The benefits of this program are expected to reverberate through the whole economy for decades to come,” Mr Nioa said.
“This is the largest ever small arms replenishment program for the ADF and NIOA is very proud to be selected after a competitive tender process.
“Australian industry participation and collaboration is embedded in our strategy.
“What that means is that for the life of the program the ownership, the intellectual property, the jobs, the skills, the investment, the profits and the control will remain within Australia.”
Minister for Defence Linda Reynolds said there would be significant opportunities for Australian suppliers to offer weapon systems, including ancillaries and munitions, and services across all three tranches of LAND 159.
Earlier this month, NIOA took up a 10-year co-tenancy at the Benalla munitions plant, producing medium- and large-calibre rounds for the ADF.
The Benalla project is part of a $130m capital investment in domestic munitions and explosives manufacturing by NIOA over the next five years, including a $60m artillery-shell forging plant in Maryborough (with Joint-venture partner Rheinmetall Waffe Munitions), that will create 100 jobs when it is operational in 2022.
“What this shows is that NIOA’s investment is not only delivering national defence capability but also regional manufacturing jobs that in turn helps communities flourish and grow,” Mr Nioa said.
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Share the post "NIOA wins first phase of LAND 159 Lethality Systems Project"
Good to see Defence has seen the light re Aussie Manufacturing and supply… Are our boots still made in Indonesia?? If so, hopefully they will be once again be brought back to AUS and made by ROSSI an Aussie company who tendered last time but lost out because they there too expensive!!!
The Rose
Good.
Glad it wasn’t Thales.
Nioa are also pretty good at commercial & civilian applications.
“…. domestic munitions and explosives manufacturing …. including a $60m artillery-shell forging plant in Maryborough….”
I hope it has a happier outcome than the domestic production of Carl Gustaf rounds produced in Australia during the Viet Nam conflict when the Swedes refused to supply us with ammo. The frequency of faulty rounds was unacceptable when lives depended on it.