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Radar trial to watch Torres Strait
http://australianit.news.com.au/arti...E15306,00.html MAY 05, 2005 A NEW radar surveillance system to boost protection against drugs, disease, illegal immigration and fishing is being trialled in Torres Strait. Defence Minister Robert Hill and Justice and Customs Minister Chris Ellison said the new over-the-horizon high frequency surface wave radar (HFSWR) would allow defence and Coas****ch to better monitor Australia's northern coastline, particularly the Torres Strait area. The strait is sensitive because of its closeness to Papua New Guinea. Senator Ellison flew to north Queensland today for the handover of the $23 million radar by contractor Daronmont Technologies. He said the trial would run for two to three years to evaluate the surveillance potential of the radar. HFSWR can detect surface vessels and low-flying aircraft beyond the visible horizon, unlike conventional radars which are limited to line-of-sight operations. "This technology has the potential to deliver 24-hour wide-area coastal surveillance of aircraft, ships and boats travelling in the Torres Strait," he said in a statement. "It also has the potential to provide early storm warnings and to protect offshore oil and gas installations, if further developed and deployed." The ceremony was attended by Torres Strait community representatives and executives from Daronmont Technologies. The project required an Indigenous Land Use Agreement (ILUA) under the 1998 Native Title Act in 1998. Senator Hill and Senator Ellison signed ILUAs with the Dauan and Badu Island communities in February 2004, allowing construction of the radar facilities on the two Torres Strait Islands. A 440m-long receiver array is on Dauan Island in the northern Torres Strait and the transmitter is on the uninhabited Koey Ngurtai (Pumpkin) island, north of Badu Island in the middle of Torres Strait. The HFSWR technology was developed by the Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO). Daronmont Technologies is a wholly Australian-owned enterprise specialising in design, engineering, integration and support of complex high technology electronics systems. Opposition defence and homeland security spokesman Robert McClelland said while Daronmont and DSTO were to be commended for their work, there was still more for the government to do on border protection and stopping illegal fishing. AAP |