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Subs plan in deep trouble: audit

May 23, 2026

Saturday 23 May 2026
Tess Ikonomou
The Canberra Times


 Defence bungled life-extending upgrades to Australia's ageing submarine  fleet, tearing up plans for the project after a decade of work worth almost  $700 million, a damning audit has found.
 
 The Australian National Audit Office released a report on Friday into the  "life-of-type extension" plan for the navy's Collins-class  submarines, which the federal government reduced in scope earlier this week.
 
 It found Defence's planning and implementation of the Collins-class extension  project did not match "its complexity, risk profile and strategic  purpose".
 
 "As a result, substantial further expenditure has been incurred, delays  have accumulated and capability risks have remained," the report reads.
 
 The 1980s-designed Collins would have begun retiring from service in 2026 but  cancelling the $90 billion French submarine program for the AUKUS deal means  Australia won't get new submarines until the early 2030s, if the program runs  on time.
 
 The report found that since the system and detailed design contract was  awarded in February 2022, it had changed 53 times, increasing by $688 million  to more than five times its original value.
 
 As of February, $693 million had been spent on life-extending design-related  work.
 
 As of May, Defence was not on track to install the planned upgrades on the  first submarine in June as planned.
 
 Defence proposed a different extension strategy in May, changing the  project's direction after 10 years of planning and design activity.
 
 Defence agreed to the auditor-general's five recommendations.
 
 "Defence's primary focus has been to maintain continuity of capability  and avoid a capability gap, which has, in practice, constrained the extent to  which comprehensive reassessment of underlying assumptions, risks and  alternative options could be undertaken," the response reads.
 
 Defence Minister Richard Marles announced the $11 billion change in approach  to the submarines on Tuesday.
 
 Opposition defence spokesman James Paterson said Labor had failed to make  timely decisions to save the planned extension program.
 
 "Australia's ageing Collins-class submarine fleet is now expected to  continue operational service until the late 2040s without materially  upgrading its capabilities, allowing regional navies to surpass it until  AUKUS submarines arrive," he said.
 
 Greens defence spokesman David Shoebridge slammed the project as a  "farce". "The minister and the senior defence chiefs knew this  audit was coming and have been desperately trying to spin their way out of  the mess," he said.
 
 Under the change, each of the six Collins-class submarines will be  individually assessed and fixed in the hope they last into the late 2030s and  2040s.
 
 Substantial further expenditure has been incurred, delays have accumulated  and capability risks have remained. From the audit report

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