Babcock Australasia, Bechtel Australia and HII Sign MOU on AUKUS Submarine Delivery

In an AUKUS-first collaboration, Babcock Australasia, Bechtel Australia and HII have agreed to work together to identify opportunities to leverage their complementary set of skills and experience to establish and support Australia’s conventionally armed nuclear-powered submarine program.

Babcock, Bechtel Australia and HII have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU).

It is the first group of companies in Australia to announce they are collaborating in this way to identify opportunities to support the required nuclear-powered submarine program from infrastructure build through to the end of life of the submarines.

It builds on the recent announcement Babcock and HII have combined forces in Australia to support nuclear-powered submarine capability under the AUKUS endeavour.

The three companies will work together to identify ways in which they can help to overcome short and long-term challenges required to deliver Australia’s nuclear-powered submarines including:


Collectively, Babcock, Bechtel Australia and HII have more than 150 years of experience supporting the UK, USA and Australian submarine fleets, as well as experience delivering complex, large infrastructure projects and critical workforce development.

Cavendish Nuclear, a wholly owned subsidiary of Babcock International Group, and Bechtel have an established track record of successfully working together at Sellafield, the UK’s oldest nuclear storage facility, and through its collaboration to support infrastructure upgrade work at Babcock’s Devonport site in Plymouth, UK.

“The Babcock, Bechtel Australia and HII collaboration offers unrivalled, global experience across defence, nuclear, workforce and infrastructure to support the delivery of Australia’s largest and most ambitious defence agenda. Babcock is a world leader in submarine capability, bringing our extensive global experience in sustainment, nuclear safety and stewardship to this AUKUS-first collaboration.

Babcock Australasia CEO Andrew Cridland

We believe this relationship is critical to ensure the nation has the capability, expertise and skilled workforce it needs to operate, manage and ultimately dispose of nuclear-powered submarines from sovereign bases, said Bechtel Australia Public Infrastructure Managing Director Dr Richard Freer OBE.

“Skilled workforce development is one of the biggest challenges that the AUKUS enterprise must overcome, and it is great to see industry working together and in close concert with Australian universities and state and federal governments to find ways to help close the future skills gap.

“Babcock, Bechtel Australia and HII collectively bring insights and experience across all aspects of nuclear submarine engineering and construction, and by working together through this MOU we can help develop optimised solutions based on more strategic thinking to the AUKUS resource and infrastructure challenges.”

Together our companies recognize the importance and value of maintaining a nuclear stewardship culture in the submarine life-cycle that emphasizes rigorous training, adherence to stringent safety standards, continuous learning, and a shared responsibility for the well-being of all stakeholders. We are committed to demonstrating these principles daily, to safeguard our people and the environment and foster public trust, said HII President Nuclear and Environmental Services Group Michael Lempke.

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