Supply chain digitisation to be used with JSF program


Monday, 25 March, 2019

Supply chain digitisation to be used with JSF program

Supply chain digitisation will help BAE Systems Australia and the Advanced Manufacturing Growth Centre (AMGC) bring Industry 4.0 to reality through participation in the world’s biggest defence program, the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.

The $750,000 project will develop a new approach that allows for project partners to see plans in real time, identify and resolve issues faster, improve risk management and optimise production.

BAE Systems supplies 300 titanium components per month from its advanced manufacturing facility at Edinburgh Parks in South Australia for each F-35 vertical tail. The company will work with its existing Joint Strike Fighter supply chain partners Axiom Precision Manufacturing and RUAG on this project, together with Advanced Focus and Flinders University.

The Defence aerospace industry was selected because of the stringent security and traceability requirements both in Australia and allied nations.

“This is so much more than replacing paper processes with digital technology,” said BAE Systems Australia’s Aerospace and Integrated Systems Director Steve Drury. “If we get this right and develop a freely available, open standard to digitise supply chains, the long-term benefits of this project to the broader Australian industry could be significant.”

The project is part of a series of BAE Systems Industry 4.0 activities that the company is running on its own or in collaboration with industry and universities. Success could also see the adoption of digitisation on other major defence projects including the Jindalee Operational Radar Network (JORN) and the Hunter Class Frigate Program.

AMGC, which is part of a Commonwealth-backed initiative, expects its co-funding of this project to allow other SMEs interested in participating in future defence projects to have access to the trial results and business tools developed as a result of the work.

“The development of best practice between a leading defence industry [organisation] and Australian SMEs is another example of how everyone can win from collaboration,” said AMGC Managing Director Dr Jens Goennemann. “This will be essential if Australia’s manufacturing sector and economy is to successfully transform as the global market accelerates toward the adoption of Industry 4.0.”

Related News

Mineral resources stocktake reinforces Australia's strengths

The latest Geoscience Australia stocktake of mineral resources has reinforced Australia's...

Engineers Australia reflects on World Engineering Day 2026

Engineers Australia says that World Engineering Day on 4 March shines a global spotlight on how...

SPC Global to close facility in Vic under demand-led strategy

SPC Global plans to close its Mill Park facility in Victoria by August 2026 and...


  • All content Copyright © 2026 Westwick-Farrow Pty Ltd