Bid leader and University of South Australia Professor Andy Koronios said until now Australian capabilities in instrumentation and communications technologies had not been brought together to capitalise on the exponential growth of the US$345 billion space economy.
“For a nation with a footprint covering one 10th of the planet, Australia has had very little presence in space,” Prof Krononis said.
“We cannot rely exclusively on the goodwill of other nations to meet our communications and connectivity needs or to monitor our nation and our resources.”
Prof Koronios said Australia could also no longer rely on terrestrial connectivity as the world started connecting everything from cattle to hospitals digitally with Industry 4.0 applications.
“No amount of land-based communication infrastructure can fully solve the digital divide that exists in a massive country like Australia,” he said.
The SmartSat CRC plans to build a flock of satellite assets that Australia can task and control to be the country’s first space infrastructure for connectivity and earth observation, according to Prof Koronios.
“We will create a data freeway in the sky by using new, game-changing technologies such as laser and quantum communications and artificial intelligence systems,” he said.
The satellite constellation is envisioned to provide advanced remote sensing capabilities to help Australian farmers, border security and emergency services monitor the expanse of Australia.
The SmartSat CRC bid is that latest in a series of announcements that have cemented South Australia’s position as the headquarters for the space industry in Australia.
Late last year Adelaide was announced as the home of the Australian Space Agency, to which a $6 million Mission Control Centre for small satellite missions and an educational Discovery Centre was added in March.
South Australia has been a significant player in the nation’s space industry and is home to major Tier 1 defence companies and several emerging space start-ups, including Fleet Space Technologies, Inovor Technologies and Myriota, which have all announced new IoT initiatives this year.
Last December Southern Launch also announced it would establish a launch facility on Eyre Peninsula, in the state’s west.
The South Australia Space Industry Centre, launched in 2017, has been instrumental in helping establish the space sector ecosystem in the state and reports that there are more than 70 companies employing 800 people in the industry in South Australia, including Italian space company SITAEL.