• Paul Gray, Chief Executive Officer, Cohda Wireless; Mark Fahey, Managing Director, MyModular; John Schultz, Managing Director, Electrocad Australia; Sharon Wilson, Strategy Director, Continuous Naval Shipbuilding, BAE Systems. (Supplied)
    Paul Gray, Chief Executive Officer, Cohda Wireless; Mark Fahey, Managing Director, MyModular; John Schultz, Managing Director, Electrocad Australia; Sharon Wilson, Strategy Director, Continuous Naval Shipbuilding, BAE Systems. (Supplied)
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BAE Systems Maritime Australia has engaged three SA businesses to trial innovative technologies and methods with the primary objective to make the naval shipyard a safer working environment for its employees.

As part of the shipbuilding business’ Innovation Program, Australian businesses were engaged to propose innovative digital safety technologies and applications focusing on 3 elements: manual handling, extraction and ventilation, and wearables for safety.

Following a competitive and thorough evaluation process, BAE Systems Maritime Australia down-selected Cohda Wireless to trial an innovative, proximity threat detection platform between shipyard personnel and moving plant equipment and vehicles. This trial is designed to protect employees from collision injury.

MyModular was selected under the ventilations and extraction element to demonstrate a very low voltage lighting solution designed to be used during construction within ship compartments that incorporates sensors that will alert employees if air quality is compromised or temperatures are rising too high.

Electrocad was chosen to demonstrate an integrated wearable body sensor solution that provide realtime feedback to the user to reduce manual handling injuries within ship compartments, including handling loads, awkward positions and repetition of activities.

The three businesses have been engaged as part of Phase 1 of the Digital Safety Innovation Challenge to test and demonstrate their innovations and technologies in collaboration with BAE Systems Maritime Australia at the pilot Line Zero, Factory of the Future facility, located within the Tonsley Innovation District.

Demonstrations are expected to begin later this year.

“Safety is our number one priority, and any new technologies we can implement to keep our workers safe, reduce injuries and risk, is absolutely worth pursuing," Craig Lockhart, Managing Director of BAE Systems Maritime Australia said. “Our work at Tonsley, in collaboration with Flinders University and an increasing number of innovative Australian businesses, is a real game changer for shipbuilding.

“The pilot Line Zero, Factory of the Future facility is both a training factory and an R&D sandpit where we are solving real-world shipyard problems in a safe, controlled and intelligent environment; a proving ground for new manufacturing techniques and technologies that will be adapted to the Osborne shipyard.

The company says it anticipates these solutions will continue into future development and testing phases to deliver a mature solution that can be applied in the Osborne Naval Shipyard to support the workers dedicated to the Hunter Class Frigate Program.

This is the second “Innovation Challenge” held by BAE Systems Maritime Australia. In December 2020, four companies – Datanet, Lamson Concepts, Cohda Wireless and Dematec Automation – won the inaugural challenge that focused on logistics ‘track and trace’ technologies. This challenge is in its final stages, also at Tonsley.

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