The United Kingdom and Australia are exploring methods to bolster collaboration among their steel sectors to support the AUKUS submarine initiative, as revealed in a parliamentary response from Defence Secretary Luke Pollard.
In reply to Conservative Member of Parliament Ben Obese-Jecty, Pollard mentioned that the matter was deliberated upon during the inaugural Australia–UK Defence Industry Exchange since 2018, convened with Australian Defence Industry Secretary Pat Conroy.
“I was delighted to welcome Secretary Pat Conroy for the inaugural Australia-UK Defence Industry Exchange since 2018,” Pollard stated. “Being among our nearest confederates, we engaged in productive talks concerning our joint efforts towards a more secure and thriving tomorrow.”
Pollard indicated that collaboration via the AUKUS alliance would assist in reinforcing defense industrial capability throughout the three involved nations. “A fundamental element of achieving this is the AUKUS alliance, poised to stimulate expansion, generate numerous employment positions, and offer fresh prospects across the three-country submarine supply network, thereby instilling crucial robustness within this critical segment of our Defence sector.”
The United Kingdom and Australia are currently collaborating to ascertain how their individual steel sectors can most effectively facilitate the fabrication of the forthcoming generation of SSN-AUKUS submarines. “We persist in cooperating with Australia to comprehend how each nation’s steel industry can offer paramount assistance for our individual SSN-AUKUS construction initiatives,” Pollard noted.
He further mentioned that British manufacturing is already contributing to the initiative, with Sheffield Forgemasters producing elements for Australia’s upcoming nuclear-propelled submarines.
“Prospects for the UK steel sector have already come to fruition, with Sheffield Forgemasters fabricating parts for Australia’s SSN-AUKUS submarines.”
Pollard stated that the endeavor is buttressed by substantial capital injection into submarine fabrication capabilities, encompassing £6 billion allocated by the UK administration for submarine infrastructure and an additional £2.4 billion from Australia aimed at enlarging manufacturing aptitude at Rolls-Royce Submarines and Sheffield Forgemasters.

