Chapter 2 Defence Materiel Organisation
2.1
The Defence Materiel Organisation (DMO) is Australia’s largest project
management organisation. DMO is part of the Department of Defence; its mission
is to acquire and sustain equipment to support the Australian Defence Force
(ADF). DMO employs over 7,500 people in more than 40 locations around Australia and overseas. DMO is currently managing over 230 major projects and 180 minor
projects.[1]
2.2
In 2006-07 DMO had a budget of over $8.5 billion; from this amount, over
$4.2 billion forms the capital budget, and over $4 billion will be spent on sustainment
(through-life support) of equipment.
Significant funding slippages for DMO’s Top 30 Projects
2.3
The Committee raised concerns about the discrepancies between the budget
estimates and actual expenditure for DMO’s Top 30 Projects in 2006-2007.
2.4
The DMO Top 30 Projects for 2006-2007 are ranked by expenditure as
forecast in the Portfolio Budget Statements 2006-2007. [2]
The expenditure for the Top 30 Projects represents approximately 77 per cent of
the total expenditure on major capital equipment in 2006-07.
2.5
Of concern to the Defence Sub-Committee were the significant variations
in budget estimates compared to actual expenditure. The initial budget estimate
for the DMO’s Top 30 Projects was $3,798 million and the revised estimate was
reduced to $3,209 million. Actual expenditure was finalised as $2,879 million;
$330 million (10 per cent) less than the revised estimate and $1,099 million
(29 per cent) less than the initial budget estimate. [3]
2.6
The Committee questioned Defence about these substantial variations:
The parliament and the public have a pretty fair expectation
that when budgets are adopted the expenditure mirrors as closely as possible
what transpires. This is not an isolated incident. This is not the first year
we have seen annual reports where these things happen.[4]
2.7
Defence replied that:
The biggest problem we are facing in Defence equipment
acquisition is schedule. As we have benchmarked ourselves against other
countries and as we have looked at our own performance, we find that, once you
make corrections for foreign exchange, inflation, changes of quantity and
transfers to other parts of the Defence organisation, that post-second pass or post-contract
formation we are bringing in most of the projects at/or around the budget. This is a
surprise to many people. When you look at the data, it shows that about 20 per
cent of the projects go over in cost, about 20 per cent of the projects come in
or around the budget, and about 60 per cent actually come in under. Those that
come in under pretty much pay for those that come in over after you make those
corrections for the quantities. I would point out that this is post-second pass
approval when we are into actually building or delivering the equipment.
In other words, cost is not the thing that gives us deep concern. The
statistics we have are that in 239 major projects—and we define a major project
as over $20 million—closed over the last 10 years with an accumulated value of
$27 billion, when you make those corrections for foreign exchange, inflation,
quantities and transfers they came in on average at 98 per cent of the budget. Typically,
the more complex the weapons system, the greater the project delays. Most of
our major projects run two or three years late. We have been doing quite a bit
of analysis on the causes of those schedule delays.[5]
2.8
Difficulties with cost arise during the period before ‘second pass’
approval, when stakeholders are still determining requirements. There is typically
a difference of 60-70% between the Defence Capability Plan, and when the
project arrives at ‘second pass’ approval. Therefore, the biggest cost issues
occur up to ‘second pass,’ although there are several costly projects after
this period. This is commensurate with the British and American experiences.[6]
2.9
The largest hurdle facing Defence is project scheduling, where projects
typically run two to three years late, with the more complex projects having
the longest delays. DMO only pays when invoices are received; therefore, if
projects are behind schedule, invoices are not submitted, which affects cost
and results in underspending.[7]
2.10
The Committee enquired whether schedule slippages were factored into the
budget estimate, especially as Australia’s experiences are in line with the
experiences of other Defence forces.[8]
2.11
Defence replied that the project estimates are over-programmed by 15 per
cent, on the assumption that 15 per cent of milestones will not be met. Any
milestones not met in excess of 15 per cent will be counted as underspend.
Recent project delays have been ‘running a bit higher than 15 per cent.’[9]
2.12
Given that budget estimates on major acquisitions assume a 15 per cent
slippage, the resulting substantial shortfall is all the more worrying. The real
impact of this slippage is a delay in necessary capability for Australia’s Defence Force. Defence and the DMO, need to improve performance in this area.
2.13
Committee Determination: The Committee will continue to monitor Defence
performance in its major acquisitions program.
Status of individual projects
2.14
In order to seek a greater understanding on the reasons for the
significant variations to budget estimates, the Committee enquired about the
status of several individual projects. These are discussed below.
Super Seasprite
2.15
The Anzac Ship Helicopter (Super Seasprite) was a maritime combat
helicopter being introduced as part of Project SEA 1411 Phase 1. The project commenced
in 1994 and initial contracts were signed in 1997. Due to significant project
delays, escalating costs and concern that the Seasprite’s full capability could
not be delivered, the project was cancelled in March 2008.
2.16
The project was to acquire 11 Super Seasprite helicopters for the Anzac
class frigates. The package included a full mission flight simulator and
software support centre. The Super Seasprite was to provide enhanced capability
for surface surveillance, anti-ship warfare, contact investigation and maritime
utility tasks.[10]
2.17
In the year under review, 2006-2007, the Super Seasprite was delayed
into operational service due to software development issues and problems with
automatic flight control. In 2006-2007 the Super Seasprites did not achieve
their targeted 100 flying hours for testing. This was due to suspension of
flying since March 2006.[11]
2.18
On 25 March 2007, the Government announced that subject to satisfactory
contract arrangements, the project was to continue.[12] It was expected that all
11 Super Seasprite aircraft, with full tactical systems functionality, would be
delivered by 2010-2011. This represented a further 3-year delay to the program.[13]
2.19
On 5 March 2008, following concerns that the software development issues
and automatic flight control problems would not be rectified in an acceptable
timeframe, the Minister for Defence announced:
In late 2007 the Rudd Labor Government
initiated a review of the Seasprite helicopter project, in line with the
promises made prior to the election. After
careful consideration of all the issues involved, the
Government has decided that it intends to cancel the project. [14]
2.20
The Committee expressed concerns about how Defence spent such a large
amount of money, over such a long period of time, which resulted in a product
that was demonstrably not what was required?[15]
2.21
Defence acknowledged the serious nature of the issues, and the magnitude
of financial loss to the Commonwealth. However, as part of the deed of
negotiation that is being reached with Kaman, Defence advised:
What we have agreed is a minimum amount, regardless of
whether the aircraft are sold by Kaman or not, and that is the $39.5 million.
Plus, there is an additional $30 million that we have retained for spares and
transferred them out of the Seasprite program across to Sea Hawk and some to
Black Hawk. It is our expectation that we will gain far more than that. I
cannot put a figure on that at the moment.[16]
We have reached a mutually agreed outcome with Kaman on the
cancellation of the program, which is subject to US government approval. We
have requested that US government approval, but it is in process at the moment
and has not yet been provided. The objective is for Kaman to take the aircraft
and equipment back, sell it on the open market and provide a share of profits
back to the Commonwealth, which is at least 50 per cent and at an increasing
level.[17]
2.22
Defence noted that the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) is also
conducting an audit into the Super Seasprite project; the report is expected to
be tabled in 2008.[18] It will focus on ‘project
management, the design acceptance process, the certification process and the
advice that goes with the certification process.‘[19]
2.23
Defence advised the Committee that lessons have been learnt from the
Super Seasprite:
Essentially it is a lot more risk mitigation prior to
entering contract. The time to bail out of a project is early, and from time to
time we will make recommendations to government that a project is simply too
risky and we should bail out.[20]
2.24
Following this explanation, the Committee was concerned that, after $1b
had been spent on the Super Seasprite, the reasons why the project ‘went wrong’
cannot be disclosed as it would impinge on the settlement with Kaman. The
Committee believed this was unsatisfactory.[21] Defence accepted this
position, and replied that the issues with Seasprite were:
In capability they have made compromises, concessions, both
by the contractor and ourselves, to try to deliver a capability as soon as they
could to Navy. There is no capability in lieu for Seasprite and so along the
way they have attempted, by changes, to make variations to deliver a
capability. It is the cumulative effects of those that have caused the problem.
Each one in isolation over many years might have been acceptable to bring the
aircraft through to fruition, but they have not been able to step back and look
at the collective effects as time has moved on.[22]
2.25
The Defence Sub-Committee, while disappointed with the Seasprite project
outcomes, notes that an external audit of the project is being conducted by the
ANAO. The Committee looks forward to receiving the ANAO Report.
2.26
Committee Determination: The Committee will be seeking further briefings
from DMO following the release of the ANAO Audit.
Tiger Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter
2.27
Project Air 87 will provide Defence with 22 Tiger Armed Reconnaissance
Helicopters (ARH); a training system, including simulation devices for aircrew
and maintenance personnel; a software support facility and a ground mission
management system.[23]
2.28
Costings for the Tiger ARH project in 2006 – 2007 were: [24]
Budget Estimate
2006-2007
|
Revised Estimate
2006-2007
|
Actual Expenditure
2006 – 2007
|
Variation from Revised Estimate
|
Variation from Budget Estimate
|
$312m
|
$246m
|
$151m
|
$ -95m
|
$ -161m
|
2.29
In explanation, the Defence Annual Report 2006-2007 states:
Delivery of operational capability to the Army is delayed by
24 months, primarily because of delays in the Franco–German program on which
the Australian Tiger relies for certification and qualification. This has
caused slippage in the aircraft and system certification, simulator development
and aircrew training. The delays in the program have resulted in the contractor
failing to achieve a critical milestone—initial operational capability—and, as
a result, the DMO imposed a contractual stop payment from the milestone schedule
delivery date of 1 June 2007.[25]
2.30
The Department of Defence told the Committee that the Tiger project’s underachievement
was attributed to two factors: that the contractor did not produce what was
expected, and that Australian Aerospace did not achieve a stop-payment
milestone (which resulted in payment being suspended).[26]
2.31
The Committee asked about the current status of the project. The
Department of Defence replied that:
Since negotiating a successful outcome through the dispute,
the program has gained significant momentum. The aircraft in Australia has flown 2,700 hours, 24 personnel have trained,
and the aircraft have been deployed to Darwin … into the regiment and into the
operational capability to start that work.[27]
Importantly for us, the negotiation converted the
through-life support contract from essentially what was a cost-plus type
contract to a performance based contract, driving an incentive on the
contractor therefore to reduce the total cost of ownership to the Commonwealth.
It has also focused on delivering an operational capability to Army as quickly
as we can possibly do so.[28]
The first four instructors were to be trained on their
[French] aircraft. Because the French army had not accepted their aircraft and
the French equivalent to DMO had not accepted their aircraft, we were unable to
affect that training in the time frame that we envisaged and was contracted.
The second was that much of the data from their aircraft was to be used for our
simulator—for example, to assist us with the certification and the development
of the simulator. The result of that was a two-year schedule slip in the
training of our staff and training of the initial cadre of flight crew.[29]
2.32
The Committee enquired further about other options available for
training. [30]
Defence replied that:
We managed as best as we possibly could to recover training,
but there are no other Tigers in service in the world at this point in time. We
did send some personnel across to fly with the US. We have looked at lead-in
skills, and part of the resulted negotiations here is to put two EC135s into Darwin - glass cockpit aircraft - to compress the training on the aircraft type as much
as we possibly can. We have deployed some instructors across to France to train with the French army to catch up as best we possibly can. We cannot recover
those first two years of basic training.[31]
2.33
The Committee also expressed reservations over DMO’s decision to go with
a platform that was not developed, as opposed to one already developed and in
service across the world.[32] Defence replied:
… there was risk in [acquiring] an early developmental
program. Perhaps part of many of the lessons learned……is the full understanding
of the maturity level of the product and the off-the-shelf level of the product
that we are trying to gain for the Defence Force and to introduce into service
to make an informed decision. It does not mean we should not take some risk,
because in some cases we do need to take some risk with the developmental
program. It just needs to be understood that we have that risk and therefore
there is potential delay to the operational capability.[33]
2.34
When asked why risks were not being accounted for, when projects are
running two to three years behind schedule, Defence replied that the Tiger
program was doing well, and lessons have been learnt.[34] These include
applying the Kinnaird two-pass process, and that:
a lot more work needs to be done between first and second
pass on analysing risks, reducing risks, and working out risk mitigators … [35]
2.35
Committee Determination: The Committee will continue to monitor the
ongoing progress of the Tiger ARH project and intend to visit the Australian
Aerospace assembly facility in the first half of 2009.
Multi-Role Helicopter (MRH-90) Project
2.36
Costings for the MRH-90 (AIR9000) in 2006 – 2007 were: [36]
Budget Estimate
2006-2007
|
Revised Estimate
2006-2007
|
Actual Expenditure
2006 – 2007
|
Variation from Revised Estimate
|
Variation from Budget Estimate
|
$183m
|
$360m
|
$329m
|
$ -31m
|
$146m
|
2.37
The MRH-90 project will consolidate and reduce the number of helicopter
fleets operated by the Australian Defence Force. The project will acquire 46
Multi Role Helicopters (MRH-90) and support systems for the Army and Navy. The
support systems will include an electronic warfare self protection support
cell, a ground mission management system, a software support centre, and
instrumented aircraft with telemetry, up to three full flight and mission
simulators and facilities infrastructure. The initial flight for the first
Australian MRH-90 was conducted on 28 March 2007. An additional 10-year sustainment contract starts from the in-service date of 18 December 2007. When completed, the project will have enhanced the ADF capability in airmobile
operation and special mission roles and enhanced troop lift helicopter
operations from HMA Ships Manoora and Kanimbla. [37]
2.38
On 30 June 2006, a contract change proposal to the project was signed
for the procurement of an additional 34 helicopters to replace the Army
Blackhawk and Navy Sea King helicopters, bringing the total to 46 aircraft. [38]
This contract change accounts for the $173 million increase from the budget
estimate to the revised estimate.
2.39
The Australian MRH-90 program is the only one in the world that is on
schedule.[39] The Committee was
advised:
The first two aircraft were accepted on 18 December last year
... The training in France, unlike for the Tiger, was effected completely and
fully. In fact, we overtrained; we completed more training in France than what we had expected to do as part of the risk mitigation. The training [in Australia] will commence in earnest very shortly. [40]
2.40
Defence further advised the Committee that the first four aircraft will be
in-service by 2011; that is the initial operational capability. All 46 aircraft
should have been delivered by the end of 2014.[41]
2.41
Committee Determination: The Committee acknowledges that this
project is currently on schedule and progressing well and believes this is due,
in part, to Defence being second or third customer (as opposed to being first
customer or first of type). The Committee will continue to monitor the
project’s progress, particularly the risk associated with the Australian
training program.
Airborne Early Warning and Control Aircraft (AEW&C) - Project Wedgetail
2.42
Costings for Project Wedgetail in 2006 – 2007 were: [42]
Budget Estimate
2006-2007
|
Revised Estimate
2006-2007
|
Actual Expenditure
2006 – 2007
|
Variation from Revised Estimate
|
Variation from Budget Estimate
|
$439m
|
$159m
|
$58m
|
$ -101m
|
$ -381m
|
2.43
The AEW&C ‘Wedgetail’ is based on Boeing’s next generation 737
aircraft, modified to accommodate various sophisticated mission systems. The
primary sensor on the aircraft is a phased-array radar, with no moving parts, that
can scan through 360 degrees. Six aircraft are being procured (AIR 5077), along with associated supplies and support systems.[43]
2.44
The Annual Report notes that:
Expenditure was less than that estimated, primarily due to
slippage against the prime contract. Events included a two-year delay,
announced by Boeing, which would shift initial operational capability to 2011.
Delays were caused by problems associated with sub-systems integration,
supplier hardware availability, radar and electronics support measures
maturity, and aircraft modification. [44]
2.45
The Committee sought an explanation as to why the budget estimate was
for $439 million, yet only $58 million was spent. [45]
Defence replied:
… in June 2006 … an 18-month delay to the program was
declared by Boeing. In February 2007 a further six-month delay was declared,
bringing the total delay to the program of, in the order of, 28 months. Just
recently, Boeing has declared a 10-month additional delay to the program, which
is associated with delivering full operational capability to the aircraft. It
intends to deliver an increment in the July 2009 timeframe, which will allow us
to commence training. The significant variances in the budget are specifically
related to those delays and the failure to achieve milestones on the program,
including progress payments, and we have had to slip those out into further
years. [46]
Incidentally, a critical lesson learnt here is the importance
of the DMO having full visibility of the contractor’s schedule and the
contractor being contracted to deliver that schedule to us. It is very hard for
us to make estimates of money to be spent if we do not have a fully populated
schedule. On Project Wedgetail we waited for that schedule for two years. [47]
Boeing, one of the largest defence contractors in the world
and one of the largest aircraft builders in the world, was unable to provide us
with a detailed schedule for some two years and we waited. We were making our
basis of estimates on our expenditure without clarity of that schedule. [48]
Contractually, they were obligated to deliver us a schedule,
but they did not. We stopped paying them. We are not going to pay contractors
for work they do not do. [49]
The significant issues that we are confronting are the
developmental issues associated with things like the multi-role electronically
scanned array MESA radar, and that is an area that is highly technical. We are
at the cutting edge. We are the first customer of a first of type, so there are
many issues associated with those developmental areas. [50]
2.46
The Committee noted that Boeing was contracted to provide a product and
a timetable for delivery in accordance with set milestones. The Committee then
asked:
Do we have anyone embedded at a senior level with the
technical know-how to identify early on apparent non-compliance with contract
milestones? [51]
2.47
Defence replied:
We have a resident project team working co-sited with Boeing
in Seattle. I also have a small resident team co-sited with Northrop Grumman in Baltimore. They are responsible for the development of the radar. I have a
resident team with British Aerospace in Adelaide that provide me with the data
and their assessment against schedule and the technical risks that we face on
the program. We have a good insight. In some areas, in particular with the
radar, we are constrained by technology transfer issues associated with the US, so we do not have full insight into some of those areas where those licensing
arrangements with the US constrain us. We engage with US government agencies
that provide additional support to us in that regard to provide some level of
insight where we do not get through to that technology transfer. [52]
2.48
The Committee further enquired:
With respect to the series of teams identified … are they
embedded to the extent such that they can keep you sufficiently informed?
Secondly, do they have the level of technical know-how to keep you sufficiently
informed about the progress of multi-billion dollar projects, instead of you
being told irregularly that the project has blown out by another 10 or 12
months? [53]
2.49
Defence replied:
The embedded teams are absolutely critical for us to
understand where the contractor is on their project. On Wedgetail, it would be
fair to say that we were predicting the delays long before Boeing was
acknowledging the delays. We were getting regular reports saying that there
were this many milestones being missed and that technical delivery was not
going to happen, and we were in a position in which we were informing
government of this extra delay a good year to a year and a half before it
happened. The lesson learnt there is that if you are going to do a major
international development program, you must have embedded staff if you are
going to do it effectively. [54]
One of the issues we are finding with both Boeing US and
Boeing Australia is a systemic problem with schedule management. We are working
with Boeing to assist them to improve how they conduct and draft up their
schedules and to provide good schedule analysis, because the same problems in
schedule management and delivery of schedule are occurring on Vigilare and HF
Modern and a number of other Boeing projects. So we are working with the supplier
to assist them in improving their schedule management. Boeing is a very good
company in respect to its provision of commercial aircraft, but it is having
some problems with its delivery of projects in Australia. [55]
2.50
At the public hearing held on 29 August 2008, Defence further reported to the Committee on the current status of the project, taking into account recent
additional delays announced by Boeing:
They are estimating a full operational capability will be
delivered in January 2010 and that a training capability would be delivered in
June of 2009.
Initial operational capability is based on when we start
training, and it is some 15 months evolution to achieve the number of crews
trained and the level of capability subsequent to that. If we start training in
the June 2009 time frame we would expect that initial operational capability to
be established by the end of 2010.
… predominantly driven by technical risks associated with the
radar and achieving specification in the radar. We are working closely with
Boeing through those issues as we speak. We formed a number of working groups
that are looking at those very issues and we will be able to assess that
residual technical risk associated with the radar in the immediate future. We
also believe that the test program has some other risks associated with it,
predominantly that it is a very complex platform. The test and evaluation
program aims to take over 12 months before we would look at getting to that
training capability in the January 2010 time frame.
Initial operational capability is based on when we start
training, and it is some 15 months evolution to achieve the number of crews
trained and the level of capability subsequent to that. If we start training in
the June 2009 time frame, we would expect that initial operational capability
to be established by the end of 2010.[56]
2.51
The Committee enquired if that meant that Defence would expect a fully
operational aircraft that could be sent to any theatre of operation in 2010. [57]
Defence replied:
That is currently the Boeing plan – to deliver a fully
operational capability in January 2010. You do not have the capability unless
you have the crews trained. The initial operational capability would be at the
end of the 2010 time frame, assuming that we start training in June of 2009.
That assumes that the aircraft are delivered fully compliant in the January
2010 time frame and crews are then subsequently trained. [58]
2.52
The Committee then enquired how confident Defence was of the aircraft
being fully compliant in that time frame. [59] Defence replied:
I believe that there is technical risk associated with the
radar, predominantly. The technical risk associated with the radar will bound
other risks related to the electronic support measures, some of our
communications, mission computing and data link aspects of that. We are working
closely with Boeing in terms of looking at those issues and looking at the
resolution path that we would need to take.[60]
2.53
Committee determination: The Committee regards the failures of Boeing in
2006-2007 to meet most of the progress targets for the Wedgetail project as
serious and unacceptable. The Committee hopes that the changes made by DMO will
prevent any further slippages for this important project. The Committee will
seek update briefings from DMO in 2009.
2.54
Following the public hearing on 29 August 2008, the Committee sought additional information from Defence on the interchangeability of Wedgetail’s sensor
suites, through-life support costs and whether any other countries were
expected to purchase the Wedgetail capability. Defence replied:
It is customary for sensors and components to be common
across the fleet and interchangeable between platforms within the fleet. This
will be the case on delivery of the Wedgetail platforms. However, while the
surveillance radars (the primary sensor) will all be delivered to the same
build configuration, each one will be calibrated to the airframe upon which it
is mounted. Interchanging radars between platforms is not envisaged.
Through-life-support costs for Wedgetail were the subject of
detailed consideration during the tender evaluation/source selection phase
conducted in 1999. Initial cost estimates that formed part of the source
selection decision were based on the assumption that Australia would be the sole
customer for the B737-AEW&C product.
Boeing is currently under contract to two other countries for
the B737-AEW&C: Turkey ordered four aircraft in 2002 and the Republic of South Korea ordered four aircraft in 2006. The United Arab Emirates is
currently conducting a competitive evaluation for the supply of four AEW
aircraft and Boeing is an active bidder in that process with the
B737-AEW&C. A number of other nations, including Oman and India, have also expressed interest in the AEW&C capability. The US Air National Guard
has also expressed interest in acquiring some aircraft for its Homeland Defense
role in due course. The Wedgetail capability is the cornerstone of the
B737-AEW&C product line and, once the capability is delivered, greater US government and international interest is anticipated. [61]
2.55
The Committee also requested comment on the number of aircraft
considered to be “critical mass” for cost effective through-life support and
whether Australia would have to pay an additional premium if Boeing did not
achieve critical mass for the Wedgetail platform. Defence replied:
The through-life-support cost analysis conducted during the
tender evaluation/source selection phase did not include consideration of the
‘critical mass’ that would be required to optimise through-life-support costs.
Demonstrated in-service performance, including exercising supply chains, would
be required to support this assessment, noting that Wedgetail is a
first-of-type. The premium Australia might pay as a result of world-wide fleet
numbers remaining at their current level of 14 is not able to be estimated with
any reliability at this time. [62]
FFG Program
2.56
Project SEA 1390 Ph 4B provides for the integration of the SM-2 missile
into four Guided Missile Frigates, delivery of missiles with mid-course
guidance capability, and acquisition of initial ship outfit and inventory stock
missiles.[63] Costings for SEA 1390 Ph 4B in 2006 – 2007 were: [64]
Budget Estimate
2006-2007
|
Revised Estimate
2006-2007
|
Actual Expenditure
2006 – 2007
|
Variation from Revised Estimate
|
Variation from Budget Estimate
|
$96m
|
$77m
|
$66m
|
$ -11m
|
$ -30m
|
2.57
This Project seeks to ensure that the four Adelaide-class Guided Missile
Frigates remain effective and supportable through to their end of life in
2013–2021. The project is upgrading ship combat systems including sensors,
missile launchers and associated platform systems for the Adelaide-Class Guided
Missile Frigates.[65] Costings for SEA 1390 Ph 2 in 2006 – 2007 were: [66]
Budget Estimate
2006-2007
|
Revised Estimate
2006-2007
|
Actual Expenditure
2006 – 2007
|
Variation from Revised Estimate
|
Variation from Budget Estimate
|
$74m
|
$91m
|
$48m
|
$ -43m
|
$ -26m
|
2.58
The Committee asked for an update on the FFG upgrades, and cited
concerns with the radar upgrade program. Defence replied:
The FFG upgrade program is at a challenging stage where we
are nearing the completion of a great deal of the development and production
work but getting to the deliberate, difficult completion and sign-off phase. [67]
2.59
Defence noted that the lead ship, HMAS Sydney, was offered for
initial release, and in 2007 Chief of Navy declined this, due to issues with
the electronic surveillance system, the maturity of the integrated logistics
support package, and issues with safety case documentation.[68]
We have been working with the prime contractor … to get the Rafael electronic surveillance system over the line. It is a C-Pearl electronic
surveillance system. We have had good progress and successes during this year
of debugging the system, finding faults in software, finding faults in some of
the inputs for that system ...
… the real issue was major reliability programs and upgrade
of the weapon systems … We have major upgrades to the radar and sensor suites …
The anti-air warfare capability of the FFG is much improved with the
installation of the evolved Sea Sparrow missiles and a Mark 41 vertical
launching system in the forward part of the ship. That is a huge capability
multiplier and we know that the ship is far superior in anti-air warfare terms
to the pre-upgraded FFG.
We are on a get-well program to get over the line on the
electronic warfare electronic surveillance systems and tactical data links and
working with the contractors to deliver the best capability. The critical
review point will be in November this year, which is a key contract milestone
for delivery and acceptance of the lead ship, its combat systems and the
supporting software. [69]
2.60
In response to the Committee’s query about whether data from the testing
and trialling is being assessed[70], Defence stated:
We are assessing data from program trials over several years.
We have had to provide additional trial windows for demonstration and debugging
of the electronic surveillance system … We have programmed further trials … to
again assess the adequacy of the new software fixes from Rafael that they have
developed …[71]
C-Pearl
2.61
C-Pearl is the electronic support measures (ESM) system aboard the Royal
Australian Navy's Adelaide-class FFG frigates. It is manufactured by Rafael.[72]
2.62
The Committee noted concerns raised by the former Chief of Navy that:
his single biggest concern was the Rafael C-Pearl electronic
surveillance system. My understanding is that the tests earlier this year
failed to meet all the requirements of Navy and that you are moving forward to
October-November. If the Rafael C-Pearl does not pass, what is the plan? [73]
2.63
Defence replied:
We are focused on satisfying the contract requirements and
the requirements of Navy right now. Our energies are very much focused on
getting C-Pearl over the line … We are focused on getting the C-Pearl system to
the highest level of capability possible and offering that to Navy. I have to
add here that the requirements baseline against which the C-Pearl is being offered
evolved after the original contract was signed. The FFG contract was signed
against a certain system of specification and the detailed operational
requirements and operational concept documentation for FFG upgrade evolved
after that contract signature. This is a pre-Kinnaird project; it is imperfect.
Some of the reasons why we are having pain and difficulties in demonstrating
the required capability is precisely because of the immaturity of requirements
that were originally put in place.[74]
2.64
The Committee accepted the explanation; however, sought further confirmation:
… [DMO] are still the acquisition organisation, which means
you actually need to have a risk mitigation strategy and a plan for when things
do not go right. So the question remains: if the tests in October-November do
not meet requirements, what is the plan? [75]
2.65
Defence replied:
It will go back to the Defence Investment Committee and it
will have to go through the government processes again because there will be no
money; therefore, anything that is alternative will have to be funded from
somewhere, which means we are into an entirely new acquisition process.[76]
2.66
The Committee asked:
Are you implying that the October-November trials are indeed
a drop-dead trial? If it does not pass then we are back into a new funding
process? [77]
2.67
Defence replied:
The FFG upgrade prime contractor has absolute requirements on
the prime (ADI, trading as Thales) to provide delivery and acceptance of lead
ship in its systems in November [2008]. Final acceptance of the total program
is in November 2009. The obligation is on them to demonstrate a compliant
system and yes, that is a very pointed position of review where, as you say,
no-go decisions are made.[78]
If they have not met the contract, then it is the
contractor’s obligation to remedy until they do meet the contract. [79]
One of the things we have to do is ensure that we do have a
contractual obligation through Thales to Rafael, to give Rafael every
opportunity to actually deliver against their contract. And that is what we are
doing. We have risk mitigation strategies, but we are not putting our resources
towards that. Our resources are being put towards actually getting the Rafael system to work. [80]
2.68
Committee determination: The Committee will watch, with a good deal of
interest, the results of the testing in November 2008. The Committee will seek
an update briefing from DMO in 2009.
2.69
In response to a written request from the Committee for information
regarding the FFG upgrade and the potential erosion of costs if funding is not
maintained until at least the concurrent introduction of the Air Warfare
Destroyer in 2015, Defence replied:
The four upgraded FFGs are planned to be decommissioned
progressively between 2015 and 2021 to align with the Air Warfare Destroyer’s
introduction into service. The Defence Management and Finance Plan (10-year
planning basis) and current Materiel Support Agreement between the Navy and the
Defence Materiel Organisation include the necessary funding to keep the FFGs
operational, materially safe and fit for purpose throughout that period. [81]
ADF Air Refuelling Capability (AIR 5402)
2.70
Costings for AIR 5402 in 2006 – 2007 were: [82]
Budget Estimate
2006-2007
|
Revised Estimate
2006-2007
|
Actual Expenditure
2006 – 2007
|
Variation from Revised Estimate
|
Variation from Budget Estimate
|
$167m
|
$147m
|
$116m
|
$ -31m
|
$ -51m
|
2.71
The ADF Air Refuelling Capability project involves the acquisition of
five Airbus A330 multi-role tanker aircraft and through-life support services.[83]
Defence updated the Committee on the progress of this project:
The first aircraft arrives in 2009 and the next few come over
the next two years after that.[84]
We have two aircraft in play at the moment. For the first
one, the modification is being conducted in Madrid… That is about
three-quarters of the way through the second stage of the ground testing program,
so it is progressing. The second one—what we call the ‘green’ aircraft, based
on the commercial platform—arrived in Brisbane in, I think, June this year.
That has been lifted up onto jacks and is being prepared to commence the
modification, and Qantas are doing that in Brisbane.
…The next commercial aircraft is in the Airbus production
line [and] the others are programmed as part of that production line. So the
commercial platform part of the program is progressing as per the schedule.[85]
2.72
The aircraft’s primary use will be for refuelling purposes, but will
also have capacity for use for deployment of squadron personnel and equipment.[86]
2.73
In response to the Committee’s query[87], Defence confirmed that Australia does not currently have its own air refuelling capability, but has made
arrangements to access refuelling assets from the United States when necessary.[88]
2.74
In 2006-07, there was an underspend on this project of $51 million from
the budget.[89] Defence clarified that
while it could partially be attributed to delays in the military conversion
from commercial platform to tankers:
It is difficult to directly relate it to that because we have
different milestones. Some of those milestones are stop payment milestones. So
the schedule in a lot of areas can be continuing along quite fine but we will
not be making payments because a particular stop payment milestone is in delay
and then once they have satisfied that stop payment milestone there is a flood
of payments made. This project is characterised by some of those stop-start
milestone payment arrangements.[90]
Air Warfare Destroyer (AWD) Project (SEA 4000)
2.75
Costings for the AWD project in 2006 – 2007 were: [91]
Budget Estimate
2006-2007
|
Revised Estimate
2006-2007
|
Actual Expenditure
2006 – 2007
|
Variation from Revised Estimate
|
Variation from Budget Estimate
|
$141m
|
$141m
|
$135m
|
$ -6m
|
$ -6m
|
2.76
The AWD project received second pass consideration in June 2007, a month
earlier than anticipated.[92]
2.77
The Committee raised concerns with Defence about the AWD’s being fitted
to accommodate one helicopter rather than being designed to take its two
helicopters on a single deployment without requiring second platform support. [93] The DMO representative
advised that:
One of the choices we had to make was whether we actually
purchased an existing Air Warfare Destroyer or an evolved Air Warfare
Destroyer. A 2½-year analysis was made about the risks associated with buying a
variance of the two. The existing Air Warfare Destroyer that we are purchasing
is the F100 Navantia design, which has one helicopter. One of the things that
we have learnt from the past is that trying to change existing designs to meet
our specific requirements actually adds risk. The Spanish Armada [with
operations very similar to that of the Australian Navy] operates its warfare
destroyers with a single helicopter, and so do a number of others.[94]
2.78
The Committee expressed concern that if a decision was made in the
future to deploy an individual AWD, their ability to conduct operations would
be severely restricted if the single helicopter was to crash. In such an
instance, there would be no backup systems to pick up the people in the crashed
helicopter. [95]
Defence replied:
This issue was debated at length through the whole of the
defence capability cycle, through the Defence Committee and through to Cabinet.
The decision was made based on good, reliable information and advice from Navy.[96]
M-113 Armoured Vehicles
2.79
Costings for the project to upgrade Army’s M-113 Armoured Personnel
Carriers (LAND 106) in 2006 – 2007 were: [97]
Budget Estimate
2006-2007
|
Revised Estimate
2006-2007
|
Actual Expenditure
2006 – 2007
|
Variation from Revised Estimate
|
Variation from Budget Estimate
|
$118m
|
$8m
|
$13m
|
$ 5m
|
$ -105m
|
2.80
The LAND 106 project is upgrading 350 of the Army’s fleet of M-113 armoured
vehicles that provide transport and fire support for the Army’s mechanised
forces. It will improve protection, firepower, mobility and habitability. The
upgrade replaces most of the existing vehicle, retaining only the hull,
hatches, rear door and communications systems. It also includes appliqué
armour, a new armoured turret and machine gun, and a new engine, drive train
and suspension. Expenditure was much lower than the budget estimate because of
delays in resolving technical problems; predominantly with the brakes. The
introduction into service date was delayed from July 2007 to November 2007.[98]
The Committee notes that delivery of the initial capability
of 16 upgraded M-113s was delivered to the 1st Brigade in Darwin in December 2007.
Vigilare
2.81
Costings for Project Vigilare (AIR 5333) in 2006 – 2007 were: [99]
Budget Estimate
2006-2007
|
Revised Estimate
2006-2007
|
Actual Expenditure
2006 – 2007
|
Variation from Revised Estimate
|
Variation from Budget Estimate
|
$32m
|
$10m
|
$10m
|
$ 0m
|
$ -22m
|
2.82
The AIR 5333 project will replace the existing Air Defence command and
control system with two new systems located at RAAF Tindal and RAAF
Williamtown. It will also design and deliver an integrated ADF Air Defence
System communications network. [100]
2.83
Following the public hearing on 29 August 2008, the Committee sought
additional information from Defence on the status of the Vigilare project;
whether the first command and control system was still expected to be installed
and operational in Tindal by early 2009 or whether Boeing was still struggling
to deliver this capability on time. Defence replied:
Vigilare’s initial operational capability, represented by
conditional acceptance of the Northern Regional Operations Centre at RAAF
Tindal, is currently planned to be provided to the RAAF in April 2010. Boeing
commenced installation at the Northern Regional Operations Centre in May 2008.
Vigilare’s final operational capability, represented by
conditional acceptance of the Eastern Regional Operations Centre at RAAF
Williamtown, is currently planned to be provided to the RAAF in June 2011.
Progress on the project has been slower than all parties
anticipated, but the criteria for the first few major milestones have been
satisfied. The dates depend on the current schedules being met for other new
and existing systems to which Vigilare is required to interface. [101]
Australian Industry Capability
2.84
In discussion with the Committee, Defence stated that a large portion of
some of the cash flow slippages in 2006-2007 were ‘…directly attributable to
industry capacity constraints’, with industry not being able to meet the demand
increase.[102]
2.85
The program to replace the F/A-18 centre barrels is a good example to
highlight this issue. Current arrangements are seeing Australia’s F/A-18 Aircraft shipped to Canada for centre barrel replacements. As Defence
had been aware at least four years ago of the need for this maintenance, the
Committee queried what had been done to develop industry capacity for this to
be carried out in Australia.[103] Defence responded that:
…in DMO we did a lot to try and develop that capability in Australia. We worked over several years over that period with both Boeing and BAE, as the major industry presence at the Williamtown site, to try and collectively bring both
those companies’ resources to bear on the problem, because neither one of them
at the time could individually cater for the volume of work that was required.
So we actually spent several years working in partnership with those companies
trying to establish a commercial proposition to start that work in Williamtown.[104]
It is not just a matter of stripping down the aircraft,
pulling it apart and putting it back together again… [There were] factors that
both industry and DMO took into account when we were determining whether we
could set this work up in Australia, because that was our aspiration. We
collectively determined that we could not do it without significant risk, and
we were not prepared to take that risk on when there was a viable alternative.[105]
2.86
In the case of the F/A-18s, ultimately only 10 centre barrel
replacements were required, which would not have justified the required
investment to establish such an operation in Australia.[106]
2.87
The Committee though, remained concerned about the level for support of
defence industry capacity in Australia.
… the question of support for industry capability and
avoiding what seems to be the plague of the Australian defence industry –
namely, peaks and troughs – what is the approach that DMO takes in respect of
that? [107]
2.88
Defence commented:
We monitor the health of industry fairly carefully to ensure
that there is enough work to keep everyone busy. As far as we can work out, the
defence industry in Australia has been growing at about four or five per cent
in capacity in real terms in each of the last four years. Each time we attempt
to provide more demand than that, we find that the products do not flow. At the
moment we are in a very firm demand period and we are not seeing any spare
capacity around the industry as a whole.[108]
Clearly, it is in everybody’s interests to level load demand
as much as possible, and those sorts of questions are part of the industry
capacity deliberations that are in the White Paper. It is not productive for
DMO either to ask for too much demand and then fail to be able to supply or to
do it the other way. Level loading is important to us. [109]
2.89
Defence informed the Committee that their strategy is moving towards
becoming part of global supply and support chains, for example by investing
over one million hours of engineering expertise in the new JSF platform.[110]
2.90
Defence also discussed the consideration given to industry capacity in
future project planning:
On the maritime projects, we have mapped out the demand for
skilled labour on each of the projects out to about 2030. It reaches a peak in
about 2012 or 2013, as the air warfare destroyer is at maximum build rate.
There is a bit of a gap in 2016 and 2017. Then it builds again towards the
latter part of the next decade.
There is some work to be done in the latter part of the next
decade to try and get better level loading. And it is being duly considered. We
have been thinking about it very intensively over the last six months.[111]
Recommendation 1 |
|
That subject to national security requirements, the ADF and
Government schedule large acquisitions in a sustainable manner over time, to
avoid peaks and troughs for Australian industry and to better provide a
long-term through-life support capability.
|
2.91
The Committee queried the feasibility of Australia developing an export
industry around light and heavy armoured vehicles. [112]
Defence observed:
It is about having the continuity so that you can maintain
that particular industry in the long term. We are actively working with the
defence export unit to export the Bushmasters. We are doing everything we
possibly can … It is difficult to crack the international export market for
these types of vehicles. Bushmasters are very capable vehicles, and we are
trying to support Thales as to their export opportunities as much as we
possibly can. But, as you have said, we have only been marketing and selling
them in small numbers.[113]
Leading Edge Customer
2.92
During the discussions surrounding DMO’s Top 30 Projects, the Committee raised
concerns that first customer/first of type development projects exhibit
substantial slippage problems. [114]
Should we as a nation be first customer/first of type in what
we do and what we procure or should we perhaps be looking at things like the
MRH-90, where we are the second customer?[115]
2.93
Defence replied:
The sweet spot is to be just behind the curve. It is no good
being right down the back of the queue because you end up with obsolete
equipment. The sweet spot is one or two years behind the lead customers. [116]
2.94
The Committee asked what DMO is doing to ensure that Australia is ‘one behind the curve, as opposed to first customer/first of type.’ [117]
2.95
Defence replied:
A good example … was the Air Warfare Destroyer decision.
There was a competition, effectively, between an evolved ship—which is a nice
way of saying a brand-new ship that has never been built before— and an
existing ship where you just do the absolutely necessary, but no more than
necessary, Australian modifications. When they
looked at the risk profile, the government chose the existing ship based on the
Spanish F105, because the Spanish have already built five of them. We were
coming in as second customer. There will be some technical problems on the AWD,
but there is nowhere near the risk you might have been taking on if you had
been lead customer with a ship that had never been built before. The LHD
[Landing Helicopter Dock] is another example. We are second customer there,
rather than first customer. [The LHD] is the big amphibious ship.[118]
2.96
The Committee further enquired:
Will you be recommending to government, based on your
comments there, that we go with second customer status, that we go with
embedding staff within project teams as much as possible, and that first
customer/first of type should be a last resort?[119]
2.97
Defence replied:
There are some technologies for which, just from the sheer
capability point of view, you might want to be right up the front. But my
strong preference is not to be that lead customer unless you walk in with your
eyes wide open to the risk profile that you are truly taking on. The same
applies in other sectors of the economy. It’s not just in Defence. When you go
first you are taking on very substantial technical and contractual risk.[120]
2.98
The Committee notes the comments by Dr. Gumley and concurs with his
assessment that the ADF should only take on lead customer status when it is
essential to do so.
2.99
Apart from Project Wedgetail, the Committee enquired whether there were
‘any other first customer/first of type projects on the DMO’s [Top 30] project
list, especially in the developmental space?’[121]
2.100
Defence replied:
The Armidale class patrol boat was an indigenous, designed in
Australia, first of class, never been built, 56-metre vessel delivered on
schedule and on budget … a great result.[122]
Nor should we leave the impression that everything Boeing
does is unsuccessful. If you look at the C-17 Heavy Airlift Aircraft, that is a
hugely successful project … four C-17s in service now, on time, on budget. [123]
2.101
Confirming the category of each of the projects on the Top 30 list,
Defence referred the Committee to Table 3.2 on page 21 of Volume Two of the
Defence Annual Report 2006 – 2007:
n The Globemaster C-17
[AIR 8000] is off-the-shelf.
n The F18 Hornet
Upgrade [AIR 5376 Phase 2] is an integration project where you get the kit from
overseas, but clearly you have to get the wiring and do everything yourself
locally, so I put that into integration.
n The next F18 Hornet
project [AIR 5376 Phase 2.4] is also integration, as is the third one – the
structural refurbishment [AIR 5376 Phase 3.2]. I should point out that all of
the F18 Hornet projects are going well.
n For the ADF air
refuelling capability [AIR 5402] we are a lead customer. At the moment we are
suffering about a five-month delay.
n The MRH [AIR 9000 Phase 2] is off the shelf.
n We have pretty much
found ourselves as the lead customer with regard to the Tiger [AIR 87 Phase 2], although we did not start as the lead customer.
n We [were] the lead
and only customer with regard to the Seasprite [SEA 1411].
n We are the lead
customer with regard to Wedgetail [AIR 5077 Phase 3].
n AWD [SEA 4000 Phase 2] is an off the shelf design, but it is an integration project, so we have
lowered the risk.
n Aegis Combat System [SEA 4000 Phase 3.1] is off the shelf.
n Armidale Class Patrol
Boats [SEA 1444] we are the lead customer there, but it is more of a commercial
design.
n FFG [SEA 1390 Phase 2] is somewhere between an integration project and a lead customer.
n The SM1 Missile
replacement [SEA 1390 Phase 4B] is off the shelf.
n For a long time now
we have been the lead customer for the Anzac Ship project [SEA 1348 Phase 2].
n Anti-Ship Missile
Defence [SEA 1348 Phase 2A] is lead and technological high-risk.
n The replacement
integrated torpedo system [SEA 1429 Phase 2] is off the shelf using an American
torpedo.
n The Collins class
reliability [SEA 1439 Phase 3] is lead customer. We are in fact the only
customer, because we have got a unique design.
n The replacement
combat system [SEA 1439 Phase 4A] is off the shelf. It is the American combat
system that we have to integrate into the submarine.
n The Main Battle Tank
Replacement Project [LAND 907] is off the shelf and on time and on budget. It
is low risk and is going well.
n We are a lead
customer on the M113 Armoured Vehicles [LAND 106] and we dropped about $100
million of spend because the braking system did not work and it took a year for
the technological issues around the braking system to be proved. That project
is back on track … but it did go through the lead customer process.
n We are lead customer
on Project Bushranger [LAND 116 Phase 4].
n The Echidna Project [AIR 5416] is integration.
n The lightweight
torpedo project [JP2070 Phase 2] is an integration project. We have got some
difficulties on that – in the integration. We are off the shelf for the actual
torpedo itself.
n Explosive ordnance
reserve stock [JP 2085] is off the shelf.
n Jindalee [JP 2025]
was lead customer.
n Vigilare [AIR 5333] was lead customer and only customer.
n Amphibious maritime
support [SEA 1654] is a combination of off-the-shelf and integration.
n The Joint Strike
Fighter [AIR 6000] is a development project now, but it will be off the shelf
by the time we get around to taking aircraft.[124]
2.102
The Committee noted that about half of the DMO’s Top 30 projects are
either lead customer or integration-type projects. It is also noted that the
greatest funding variations/slippages occur in these types of projects. While
DMO recognise that being lead customer for leading edge projects is indeed high
risk, the Committee expects DMO to provide more accurate spending calculations
when determining budget estimates.
Managing Risk and Training Project Managers
2.103
In response to the Committee’s concerns, DMO highlighted some of the
measures it has since introduced to more effectively recognise and manage risk
and also ensure value for money.
The corollary of all that is that you need a commercially
savvy, strong and intervening Defence Materiel Organisation or the equivalent
in other countries, to manage the buyer’s risks intensively…. To manage what I
call that massive amount of residual risk that always stays with the
Commonwealth, what DMO is doing is building up the professionalism of our staff
in contracting, engineering and program management. Only by having a cadre of
about 2,000 experienced professional people are we really going to be able to
manage the risk properly for the Commonwealth.[125]
We are leading the world in the development of training for
very high-end project managers. We have developed with the Queensland
University of Technology the first ever advanced executive masters program in
complex project management, which is now the world leader. That was as a result
of one of the lessons learnt, which was that managing these very high-end
projects is a very high level skill. You need very special people to run those
types of programs. We need to make sure that we train them as best we possibly
can. These people are dealing in billions of dollars of taxpayers’ money and we
need to make sure that we have the best possible people running those
particular jobs.[126]
Procurement Issues
2.104
The Committee commented on the importance of DMO negotiating up front, a
clear arrangement with the respective service, prior to commencing any
acquisition program, and sought DMO’s comments on this aspect.[127] Defence
replied:
Having just recently worked as the program manager for the LHD
[Landing Helicopter Dock] program, we had two years of consultation with Navy,
Army and Air Force to ensure that the certification baseline for those ships
was absolutely documented down to the condition of the PA speaker in the second
level being assessed at a particular standard by a particular person for the
first vessel, not the second, and that would be acceptable, and that was signed
off by 11 signatories with the services.
The difficulty we have with a legacy program, like FFG, was that the documentation of the acceptance process … was not as clear as it should have
been. One of the things that we have increased and we have improved
significantly is to ensure that the documentation about what DMO as an
organisation actual have to deliver through capability development to the
Services is documented as best that we can at the time prior to contract, which
is part of the Kinnaird two-pass process. We actually have documented tender
quality pricing with detailed processes in respect of acceptance because that
is what industry wants. Industry wants clarity of exactly what they have to deliver
to us. So there was a three-way process between industry, DMO and the [Defence]
organisation. But also with capability development there is the broker to
ensure that everybody was clear about the requirements.[128]
2.105
The Committee asked how a piece of equipment enters service, using a
ship as an example. Defence explained the process:
The Navy has a ship acceptance certificate, TI338. When the
contractor believes they can offer a contractually compliant product there is a
formal offer. There is a disclosure of everything we know about the state of
the ship and its systems, trial cards, problems and bugs. There is never 100
per cent full compliance of every requirement and contractual issue. We then go
into the ‘so what’ analysis about the significance of those issues and we make
resolutions as to what issues have to be resolved by the contractor at their
expense post-delivery; what needs to be resolved by DMO and what other issues
need to be resolved by Navy. They are in various categories which are
risk-based and a number of them are focused in the safety regime. It is all
about assessing that fitness for service. The T1338 is then the basis for us
saying to Navy: ‘We want you to consider this for operational release or
initial operation release’. The T1338 set of certificates is supplemented by a
bunch of other assessments made by Navy and specifically by the RAN Test
Evaluation and Acceptance Authority. Recommendations are taken by Director-General
Navy Certification Safety and Acceptance [then] go to Chief of Navy and present
a case. We say ‘This is what you have; these are the risks; these are
transitional measures proposed by the contractor, DMO and Navy’. [129]
2.106
The Committee observed that while significant improvements have been
made in this regard, they were surprised that the Services still had the absolute
right to refuse delivery of a platform, even after DMO had either signed off,
or substantially signed off, on contract compliance.[130]
2.107
Defence replied:
The way to get it right is to make sure that the original
specification is correct … then there will not be a dispute at the back end.[131]
Industry is only required to deliver what is in the contract.
It would be unconscionable of us to ask industry to do more than that. [132]
With a 10-year project, it is possible that … military
technology [requires] you to do something to upgrade your platform as you are
bringing it into service. The correct way of doing it is probably a new project
fully open and visible to everybody, fully costed, and you work on it then. Of
course, we did that with the Collins submarine. The contract went for many
years and then there was a subsequent project – SEA1439 – which was to bring it
up to the next level of capability. [133]
An example of the
improvements is that we were able to recently deliver a replacement to HMAS Westralia
actually ahead of schedule and under budget and Navy accepted. Tenix, who
delivered the vessel, was paid a bonus for delivering ahead of schedule and
actually meeting all their criteria, but there were a number of items that we
had to improve and work with Navy on. Navy accepted the ship and the ship is in
operation. There are still some things that were outstanding that we are
resolving even today.[134]
2.108
The Committee raised its concerns with Defence, questioning the fairness
to tenderers when Defence specifications may still be evolving during the
contract negotiation stage with a preferred tenderer and even after contract
signature, which may require new tenders in order to meet the altered
specifications. In the case of Project Overlander (LAND 121):
…the company spent the time, effort and money submitting a
tender to the specification you had out there at that stage, it had been
successful at that stage and then the specification changed. What compensation
are you paying to industries that spend money and time developing tenders only
to have those specifications changed so that they cannot compete? [135]
2.109
Defence replied:
For Defence contracting as a whole, we do not pay tenderers’
costs – this has been well established over a long time. However, in this
particular circumstance [the medium and heavy weight trucks in the LAND 121 Project], we are offering those who wish to retender, some monetary assistance to help
them with their tendering costs and, in particular, their test and evaluation
costs.[136]
Cost-cutting
2.110
As part of the Government’s whole-of-government savings program, Defence
advised that 5 per cent of savings is being offered across the DMO sustainment
budget ($230m from a $4.5b budget). Savings will be derived from industry, from
the service fee area, and from the acquisitions area. [137]
Reallocation of Funding
2.111
In July 2008, the United Kingdom House of Commons’ Committee of Public
Accounts published a report titled “Ministry of Defence: Major Projects Report
2007”. [138]
The Report was quite critical of UK Defence spending, particularly concerning
major project slippages and the subsequent reallocation of funding. Defence
were requested to comment on whether the same criticisms could be applied to
the ADF. Defence replied:
The report made seven conclusions and recommendations, of
which three directly related to specific UK projects or processes and therefore
are not relevant to the DMO. The remaining four could be viewed as having
applicability to Australia. The UK report’s major criticisms centred on cost
shifting and therefore placing increasing burdens on non-project budgets to
absorb these transferred costs.
Post Kinnaird and the introduction of the Two Pass process,
the DMO has demonstrated, backed up by Mark Thomson from ASPI’s analysis in his
2008-09 Budget Brief, that project costs post-Second Pass overall are within
about 98 per cent of project approval value when corrected for foreign
exchange, inflation, changed quantities, and scope. Pre-Second Pass cost estimation remains problematic for Defence, given the uncertainty over the type and
number of capabilities required in the future and the future environment in
which they will operate.
The Two Pass process, and associated Net Personnel and
Operating Costs process, ensures that all areas within Defence are engaged in
the development and assessment of project costs and ongoing operating costs.
Therefore, the criticisms of the UK Defence process could not be said to be a
concern in the Australian context. [139]
Conclusion
2.112
DMO is a complex and diverse organisation that has undergone significant
change since the Kinnaird Review[140] was released in 2003.
Both Defence and DMO have undertaken a considerable amount of work to remediate
and reform their practices and to implement the recommendations in the Kinnaird
Review.
2.113
The Defence Sub-Committee acknowledges the report released in August
2008 by the Joint Standing Committee on Public Accounts and Audit titled Progress
on equipment acquisition and financial reporting in Defence.[141]
This report analyses the progress made by DMO since the Kinnaird Review. The
Government response to this Report is due in November 2008.
2.114
The Defence Sub-Committee also acknowledges the recent Defence
Procurement and Sustainment Review (the Mortimer Review 2008).[142]
The Review evaluated DMO’s progress made under the Kinnaird reforms and
examined current acquisitions and sustainment processes. This review has made a
number of key recommendations to Government. The Review was still under
consideration when this Report was drafted.
2.115
Both of the above documents are of interest to the Committee and will
inform future briefings and hearings.