Marine robots take orders from afar at ReefWorks

The missions included using sonar to detect objects on the ocean floor and patrolling an area to detect and identify unknown vessels and escort them to shore.

Marine robots take orders from afar at ReefWorks

AIMS’ ReefWorks tropical marine test range near Townsville hosted the first tropics-based component of an innovative naval exercise featuring civilian autonomous technology controlled 1800km away in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT).

Autonomous Warrior is the Royal Australian Navy (RAN)'s flagship program for identifying, demonstrating and experimenting with potential robotics, autonomous systems and artificial intelligence (RAS-AI) capabilities. The exercise is an opportunity for the RAN, industry and research organisations to come together to observe, demonstrate, trial and test a variety of RAS-AI capabilities in a controlled environment.

At the ReefWorks event, autonomous surface vessels designed by Australian Droid and Robot (ADR) were livestreamed to, and controlled from, the Navy’s Autonomous Warrior command centre in Jervis Bay using BITSCore remote tasking technology.

The missions included using sonar to detect objects on the ocean floor and patrolling an area to detect and identify unknown vessels and escort them to shore.

It was the first time the Australian Maritime Safety Authority approved a swarm permit for autonomous vessels. A swarm is a collection of vessels working cohesively, directed by an operator. It has advantages over single units by increasing the speed and size of data acquisition while reducing mission time.

Other organisations supporting the event included: Warfare Innovation Navy, MacroData, Black Dog Media, Omnititan Productions, NQAV  and the Trusted Autonomous Systems Defence Cooperative Research Centre.

ReefWorks is a new AIMS facility that offers a national capability to safely test marine technologies, uncrewed systems and new sensors. It is the only facility of its kind in the world in tropical waters which is a challenging operating environment for marine technology.

Following the exercise, AIMS hosted an event for north Queensland’s marine technology leaders to see the technology in action and speak with the innovators who delivered the Autonomous Warrior event.