Australia, Norway partner on acquisition, domestic manufacturing of Naval Strike Missiles, Joint Strike Missiles

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HMAS Sydney fires Royal Australian Navy’s first Naval Strike Missile during a SINKEX off the coast of Oahu, Hawaii as a part of Exercise Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) 2024. Photo: LSIS Daniel Goodman

The Australian Government has signed a memorandum of understanding with the Norwegian government to further support the acquisition and domestic manufacturing of missiles in Australia.

The Australian Government has signed a memorandum of understanding with the Norwegian government to further support the acquisition and domestic manufacturing of missiles in Australia.

The multilateral arrangement will enhance information sharing and collaboration between Australia, Norway and 10 other countries that use the Naval Strike Missile and Joint Strike Missile, which are developed by Norwegian defence company Kongsberg.

The arrangement will support Australia to become a regional missile production hub.

 
 

The Strike Missile Family memorandum of understanding supports Australia’s efforts to acquire, manufacture and maintain the Naval Strike Missile and Joint Strike Missile, in line with the 2026 National Defence Strategy and 2024 Australian Guided Weapons and Explosive Ordnance Plan.

The Australian Government is investing up to $850 million to enable Australia to locally manufacture and maintain the Naval Strike Missile, Joint Strike Missile and priority missile components.

This includes the construction of a new missile factory in Newcastle, which will be able to produce missiles for the Australian Defence Force and partner nations from 2027.

These initiatives form part of the Albanese Government’s investment of up to $36 billion over the decade to accelerate the acquisition and manufacture of longer-range munitions in Australia, in line with the 2026 Integrated Investment Program.

“The Albanese Government is investing up to $36 billion over the next decade to make missiles in Australia and uplift our weapons stocks, making our nation more self-reliant and resilient,” according to Minister for Defence Industry Pat Conroy.

“This arrangement will support local jobs and a defence future made in Australia by enabling domestic manufacturing through cooperation with international partners.”

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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