Skip to content
Defence, Medical Health Aged Care

Battle-ready medical drones to join Army’s ranks

Charles Darwin University 2 mins read

A new drone delivery project led by Charles Darwin University (CDU) will aim to revolutionise healthcare in modern warfare.

The project, led by the North Australia Centre for Autonomous Systems (NACAS) at CDU and supported by the Queensland Defence Science Alliance (QDSA), will focus on solving the technical, logistical and regulatory challenges of integrating large, heavy-fuel cargo drones into the battlefield operating system.

NACAS will work with Queensland uncrewed aerial systems (UAS) manufacturer SAIDYNAMICS to adapt their hybrid 2-stroke engine drone for long-range, cold-chain cargo operations.

The project will also partner with Griffith University’s Centre for Enterprise Architecture Research and Management to develop navigation algorithms for drones to locate drop-off locations in GPS-degraded environments. 

Visual line-of-sight trials are set to begin over the coming months in the Northern Territory, with longer beyond-visual line-of-sight trials (BLVOS) to start with regulatory approval. 

NACAS Professor Hamish Campbell said the Australian government was investing heavily into sovereign capability for the manufacture of UAS, but far less attention was being paid to solving the challenges of integrating these platforms into existing operating systems and the national airspace. 

Professor Campbell said the Northern Territory’s low ground infrastructure and sparse population made it an ideal location for the project’s flight trials. 

“NACAS is one of the leading organisations in Australia for research into UAS airspace integration, and this will be bolstered by the opening of the new Airspace Integration Research Facility (AIR-F) later in 2025,” Professor Cambell said. 

QDSA Director Stuart Blackwell said the Alliance was focused on collaborating with the best minds in the Northern Territory, Queensland, and Defense industry to solve key challenges faced by the Australian Defense Force (ADF).

“QDSA believes this particular project has real potential to solve some of the logistics distribution challenges in remote locations of Northern Australia that will benefit Defense, Queensland and the Northern Territory,” Mr Blackwell said.

CDU Deputy Vice-Chancellor Research and Community Connections Professor Steve Rogers said the University was well-placed to contribute to advancing defence capabilities.

“Australia needs to be at the forefront of defence research and innovation, and our researchers will provide strategically vital experience to these projects,” Professor Rogers said. 

“Charles Darwin University became a member of the Queensland Defence Science Alliance less than a year ago and the beginning of these projects are a testament to our world-leading knowledge and capabilities.”

Northern Territory Chief Minister and Minister for Defence NT Lia Finocchiaro congratulated the grant recipients. 

“This research reinforces the importance of the Northern Territory to our nation’s defence security and strategic importance in the Indo-Pacific,” Mrs Finocchiaro said. 

“I look forward to showcasing the incredible capabilities of our industry at NT Defence Week in April 2025.”


Contact details:

Raphaella Saroukos she/her
Research Communications Officer
Marketing, Media & Communications
Larrakia Country
T: +61 8 8946 6721
E: [email protected]
W: cdu.edu.au

Media

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 28/03/2026
  • 07:18
Royal Australian College of GPs

Brisbane GPs in training head south-west to experience practice in rural Queensland

Brisbane based general practice registrars travelled to St George, Surat, and Roma from 25–27 March as part of an RACGP program designed to showcase the realities, opportunities, and rewards of rural general practice. Led by RACGP Senior Medical Educators Dr Mike Hurley and Dr Cindi Jackson, the registrars visited local hospitals, general practices, and community health services including St George Hospital, Goondir Health Services, St George Medical Centre, Surat Multipurpose Health Service, Roma Hospital, and Maranoa Medical Centre. Education was a major focus of the trip, with registrars taking part in rural case discussions, sessions on skin cancer, sepsis and…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 28/03/2026
  • 07:10
Angelalign Technology Inc.

Angelalign Technology (6699.HK) Releases 2025 Results: Passion for Clinical Excellence Drives Worldwide Growth

SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.–BUSINESS WIRE– Angelalign Technology Inc. (6699.HK) (“Angel” or the “Company”) released its financial results for fiscal year 2025. During the reporting period,…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care, Science
  • 27/03/2026
  • 14:52
The Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand (TSANZ)

Emerging respiratory research and investigators at TSANZSRS 2026

Key Facts: New respiratory research to be presented at TSANZSRS 2026 spans genomics, rare lung disease,COPD and life-course lung health. The program includes the Ann Woolcock New Investigator Session, showcasingresultsfrom early-career researchers with potential clinical and translational impact. Featured investigatorsrepresentmajorcentresincluding The Kids Research Institute Australia, the University of Melbourne, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Edith CowanUniversityand the University of Newcastle. New work will examine how respiratory disease develops, how it may be detected earlier, and how emerging technologies could improve treatment and prevention. Perth, March 2026 -New research ranging from precision genomics to pleural disease, rare inherited lung conditions and the…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.