Everything you need to know about Adelaide Convention Bureau’s huge win

Everything you need to know about Adelaide Convention Bureau’s huge win

The 2017 International Astronautical Congress (IAC) with 4500 delegates remains the largest business event won by the Adelaide Convention Bureau and Team Adelaide for South Australia.

On 12 December, the Premier of South Australia in a joint announcement with the Australian Prime Minister announced Adelaide would be the home of Australia’s new A$41m Space Agency and in doing so, created one of, if not the largest legacies of any Australian business event.

From the outset of the  decade long process in bidding, losing, re-bidding and winning the highly prestigious event, the goal of the  local IAC committee members from the Space Industry Association of Australia was to utilise the event to ignite discussion and enthusiasm at a federal government level with the aim of creating an Australian Space Agency.

Their goal was realised on 25 September 2017 at the opening ceremony of the 5-day event with the announcement that the Government would indeed open a National Space Agency –  and thus began a fierce bidding process by most Australian states to house the agency’s permanent headquarters.

The Australian Space Agency location announcement is the pinnacle of a series of legacies eventuating from the IAC 2017.

It will be housed, along with similarly aligned businesses, innovators and organisations, in the old Royal Adelaide Hospital site (now known as Lot Fourteen Innovation Hub) in the eastern end of the CBD – just walking distance or a free tram ride from the Adelaide Convention Centre and the BioMed City including the new hospital all located the West End of the city.

Set to open in 2019, the Agency will employ 20 people and will regulate, licence and assess space-related activities conducted by private industry.

It gives Australia a new seat at the table in the regulation of space under international law, will include a mission control centre and will be responsible for facilitating industry growth.

The Federal Government hopes that the agency will help coordinate Australia’s space industry to create 20,000 new jobs and triple its current A$4bn worth to A$12bn by 2030.

Additionally, the Federal Government announced in November 2018 that Australia’s space and machine learning industries would receive A$35 million in funding from its national science agency in another positive development for Australia’s small but growing space sector built on the momentum generated following the hosting of the IAC in September 2017.

Of the A$35m, Space Technology will receive A$16m to identify and develop the science and find new areas for Australian industry to work in.

A$19m will target AI-driven solutions for areas including food security and quality, health and wellbeing, sustainable energy and resources, resilient and valuable environments, and Australian and regional security.

This followed the announcement that Lockheed Martin Australia has become the first Foundation Partner with the University of Adelaide’s new Australian Institute for Machine Learning in South Australia.

The strategic partnership will deliver world-leading machine learning research for national security, the space industry, business, and the broader community.

The University of Adelaide’s new Australian Institute for Machine Learning will be also be based at the Lot Fourteen Innovation Hub.

South Australia has long played an integral role in the nation’s space activity with the nation’s first satellite launched from Woomera in the state’s outback some 50 years ago.

Currently, it is home to major Tier 1 defence companies and about 60 companies currently working in space-related industries, employing about 800 people (in SA).

Adelaide Convention Bureau CEO Damien Kitto said: “The Space Agency location announcement truly is the ultimate legacy following the hosting the IAC and it presents a huge opportunity for the Adelaide Convention Bureau.

“As with medical and health-based events following the massive investment in infrastructure in the BioMed City, this development has opened the doors to the Bureau now having a huge asset to utilise when seeking to attract space and related industry events to Adelaide.”

Other Legacies of the 2017 IAC

Investment opportunities

  • Adelaide SPACE startup Fleet announced a partnership with French space agency CNES to track and support Fleet’s first nanosatellites once launched.
  • Italy’s largest privately-owned space company SITAEL signed a letter of intent with local start up Inovar to jointly establish a multi-million dollar company in South Australia dedicated to the development and integration of nano-micro and mini-satellite based innovative satellites and space mission concepts. This includes deployment and operation of satellite ground station.
  • Two letters of intent were signed between the South Australian Government and Germany respectively, with DLR (German Aerospace Centre) and the State of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen.

Skilled Migration

  • Former Space Shuttle commander Pamela Melroy migrated to Adelaide to work with Nova Systems for 12 months.

Developments & Education within the genre

  • UniSA, the International Space University and the Government of South Australia signed a Memorandum of Intent for specific implementation of the yearly Southern Hemisphere Space Studies Program. It includes a study for the development of short courses in the field of space entrepreneurship; and a study for the creation of a joint Institute in Adelaide to create a sustainable base for joint activities in the space field.

Lot Fourteen:  https://renewalsa.sa.gov.au/projects/lot-fourteen/

Adelaide Convention Bureau http://www.adelaideconvention.com.au/

Email the Travel Weekly team at traveldesk@travelweekly.com.au

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