Shield AI encourages Australia to ‘get on board and shape development’ of Hivemind systems

Industry
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V-BAT. Photo: Shield AI

Deep-tech defence company Shield AI has encouraged the Australian government to get involved early to reap the most benefit from its cutting-edge Hivemind-enabled systems.

Deep-tech defence company Shield AI has encouraged the Australian government to get involved early to reap the most benefit from its cutting-edge Hivemind-enabled systems.

Shield AI discussed its Hivemind system, designed to operate alongside human decision makers, reduce load on personnel operators, and leverage real-time data and geospatial insights, on the sidelines of the recent Australian International Airshow 2025 in Melbourne.

The Hivemind Enterprise suite is composed of AI-powered autonomy software products designed for rapid development, test and evaluation, and deployment across warfare domains.

 
 

Shield AI, vice president of Hivemind Engineering and former US Air Force avionics specialist, Christian Gutierrez, speaking to Defence Connect at Avalon 2025, said rapid developments are being made in AI-enabled systems for defence.

“Look, the Australian market is a lot like the US, there are a lot of the same industry partners. A lot of the same weapon systems. Trying to solve the same problems, and we can do that,” he said.

“(Avalon) it's a great venue to meet industry partners to see what's going on with some mixed technology, see what's out there, and also be cognisant that we're looking to really increase our footprint here in Australia.

“We’re excited (to work with the ADF and Defence) and they're very energised to adopt this technology. We have a lot of lessons learned through partnering with the US Air Force, the US Navy and the journey we went through with them. And we're still going through the journey with the US Department of Defense. So I think that there are a lot of reference points that we can bring in.

“The industry and the customer have come along for the ride, right? No developmental technology has ever been fielded without the customer being there as early adopters and having that early touch.

“(If Australia) want to be a part of that early touch point and make sure that we're building something that solves the problem they are concerned about.

“We know that this is the right time to start investing in this. Let's bring the customers on that journey. Let's have them help, influence and develop.”

The venture-backed defense technology company has also recently announced that the latest evolution of its Hivemind pilot-ready V-BAT vertical take-off and landing unmanned aerial vehicle will offer Group 4 and 5 capabilities in a Group 3 package.

The aircraft is designed to find and target threats in GPS- and communications-denied environments and provide persistent maritime surveillance.

“The most forward-thinking militaries are swapping out their larger, more expensive ISR aircraft, which are too vulnerable for how much they cost, and accomplishing the same missions with smaller, more affordable drones, like V-BAT,” said Brandon Tseng, Shield AI’s president, co-founder, and a former Navy SEAL.

“V-BAT is built for the full spectrum of drone missions – from deep-penetration ISR-T where GPS and comms are jammed to border security, search and rescue, and drug interdiction. If there’s a mission out there, V-BAT can do it – faster, cheaper, and where others can’t.”

The latest iteration of V-BAT will reportedly achieve endurance beyond 13 hours, compatibility with naval and expeditionary operations, a heavy-fuel engine optimised for JP-5 (maritime aircraft fuel) and a fully unassisted vertical launch and landing capability, requiring no runway, catapult, net recovery or human operator assistance on take-off or recovery.

The US Coast Guard recently selected V-BAT for a major ISR operations contract, and the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force named it their first-ever ship-based ISR platform.

Robert Dougherty

Robert is a senior journalist who has previously worked for Seven West Media in Western Australia, as well as Fairfax Media and Australian Community Media in New South Wales. He has produced national headlines, photography and videography of emergency services, business, community, defence and government news across Australia. Robert graduated with a Bachelor of Arts, Majoring in Public Relations and Journalism at Curtin University, attended student exchange program with Fudan University and holds Tier 1 General Advice certification for Kaplan Professional. Reach out via email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or via LinkedIn.
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