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Surveillance Australia

Australian aviation company

Surveillance Australia

Australian aviation company

FieldValue
airlineSurveillance Australia
logo_size170
fleet_size10
IATA-
ICAOBDF
callsignBORDER FORCE
parentLeidos Holdings Inc.
founded1994
headquartersAdelaide Airport, South Australia
bases
websiteLeidos Australia
  • Broome International Airport
  • Cairns Airport
  • Darwin International Airport

Surveillance Australia Pty Ltd (formerly Cobham Aviation Services Australia - Special Mission) is an Australian aviation company. It is primarily engaged in servicing the Australian Border Force Coastwatch contract, flying surveillance patrols within the Australian Exclusive Economic Zone (AEEZ).

History

Surveillance Australia was established in 1994 by National Jet Systems as a subsidiary to operate fixed-wing aerial surveillance aircraft and patrols on behalf of the Australian Customs Service Coastwatch operations.

In 1999, National Jet Systems and its subsidiaries including Surveillance Australia, were acquired by Cobham plc for £24.5 million.

In 2006, Surveillance Australia was awarded the 1 billion Coastwatch contract that will see its aircraft operating through to 2020. This contract saw operations be restricted to only 10 de Havilland Canada Dash 8 aircraft, retiring the previously mixed fleet including the Reims F406 Caravan II. This contract was due to be succeeded by the 2018 announcement by the Australian Government for the Future Maritime Surveillance Capability (FMSC), followed by an RFI release in October 2018.

In 2009, Surveillance Australia was rebranded to Cobham Aviation Services Australia - Special Mission to align its branding with the broader Cobham group.

At the end of 2021, with the existing contract close to expiring, the Department of Home Affairs approved a contract variation to extend it by 6 years to 31 December 2027.

In October 2022, Surveillance Australia was acquired by the American government services contractor Leidos, and will be operated locally by Leidos Australia.

Operations

Surveillance Australia, Australian Border Force Dash 8 (2005).

Surveillance Australia aircraft conduct over 14,000 hours a year of aerial surveillance in the AEEZ, searching for illegal fishing vessels, human traffickers, drug importation, immigration and quarantine breaches, and can assist in search and rescue operations.

Surveillance Australia has played major roles in several border protection operations, directly contributing to over 200 foreign fishing vessels being apprehended and destroyed for illegally fishing for shark fin, reef fish and dolphins in Australian waters each year.

It also formerly supported operations of a single airborne laser depth sounder (LADS) aircraft for the Royal Australian Navy, as a service via the aircraft owner, Fugro.

Fleet and bases

Headquartered in Adelaide, the company has three operational bases in Cairns, Darwin and Broome. It operates a fleet of six DHC-8-202 and four larger DHC-8-315 'Dash 8s' modified for maritime patrol and surveillance. One further Dash 8 was formerly configured for the LADS contract. This aircraft was de-configured and stored at Adelaide Airport until its eventual sale to US-based Berry Aviation in 2023.

The surveillance aircraft are equipped with Raytheon SeaVue surface search radars with additional Inverse synthetic aperture radar (ISAR), Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and Moving target indication (MTI) capability, advanced electro-optical sensors and sophisticated communications suites. They can operate day and night close to land below lowest safe altitude. These aircraft can search an area of 110,000 km2 per flight.

The Mission Management System (MMS) developed by Adelaide-based Acacia Systems integrates various onboard surveillance systems and provides real time communications between aircrew and Maritime Border Command headquarters in Canberra. The same system is used on AMSA Search and Rescue aircraft, which are also operated by Leidos Australia.

Fleet

Surveillance Australia operate this LADS-equipped de Havilland Canada Dash 8, VH-LCL.

Surveillance Australia fleet currently operates 10 aircraft:

  • 2 Bombardier DHC-8-202 Dash 8 (as of August 2019)
  • 4 de Havilland Canada DHC-8-202 Dash 8 (as of August 2019)
  • 3 Bombardier DHC-8-315 Dash 8 (as of August 2019)
  • 1 de Havilland Canada DHC-8-315 Dash 8 (as of August 2019)

References

References

  1. "Australian Coastwatch".
  2. (1999-12-20). "Coastal watch sold to British".
  3. [http://www.cobham.com/?Section=1009&DocId=1068 "Cobham Signs A$1bn Coastwatch Contract"; Cobham plc Media Release] Retrieved: 2007-11-11
  4. "Maritime Surveillance Capability Project".
  5. "Contract Notice View - CN23257-A13: AusTender".
  6. "Leidos completes acquisition of Cobham Aviation Services Australia's Special Mission business". Leidos.
  7. (2021). "Management of the Civil Maritime Surveillance Services Contract".
  8. [http://www.surveillanceaustralia.com.au/home.asp Surveillance Australia home page.] Retrieved: 2007-11-11
  9. [http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/micro_stories.pl?ACCT=149999&TICK=RTN&STORY=/www/story/03-14-2006/0004319808&EDATE=Mar+14,+2006 "Raytheon Awarded SeaVue Radar Systems Contract for Australian Coastwatch"; Raytheon Media Release.] Retrieved: 2008-02-06
  10. [http://www.customs.gov.au/webdata/resources/files/AnnualReport06_07_Full.pdf Australian Customs 2007 Annual Report] Retrieved: 2008-02-05
  11. Nick Gardner. "Cobham plc :: Home". cobham.com.
  12. "Products & Services – Acacia Systems".
  13. "Cobham and Acacia Systems lead the way in aviation data systems".
  14. (October 2019). "Global Airline Guide 2019 (Part One)". Airliner World.
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