Government & Defence Supply Chain Management

Supply chain and workforce solutions for government and defence.

Trace helps Defence and Government agencies optimise supply chains, workforce operations, and service delivery. With proven experience across Federal and State Government and as members of multiple government panels, we deliver practical, resilient solutions that improve outcomes in complex, high-stakes environments.

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Supporting Australia's most complex operations with practical, outcome-driven consulting.

The Australian Defence Force (ADF) manages one of the country’s largest and most complex supply chains with billions invested annually in procurement, sustainment, and logistics. The performance of these systems is critical to operational readiness and national security.

At Trace Consultants, we bring deep expertise in defence supply chain strategy, government procurement, and public sector service delivery.

Government & Defence Consultants

Meet our government and defence experts:

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Mathew Tolley

Trace Partner
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Mathew has had previous roles in the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, including as Director in the Office of Supply Chain Resilience. Over 12 years of experience advising public and private sector organisations.

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Emma Woodberry

Senior Manager
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Emma is a former Logistics Officer in RAAF, with over 10 years of experience in supply chain specialist consulting across diverse public sector organisations.

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David Carroll

Manager
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David Carroll is a Management Consultant with over eight years of experience supporting Federal Government clients.

Core service offerings

Strategic, operational, and technical support for government & defence:

From high-level strategy to hands-on implementation, Trace delivers targeted support across the full spectrum of supply chain, procurement, workforce, and system challenges.

Workforce Strategy & Service Chain Optimisation

We help government agencies and defence departments plan, roster, and deploy workforces that are efficient, resilient, and ready. Our work spans the full end-to-end service chain, from strategic workforce planning through to daily scheduling.

Key Services:

  • Workforce Strategy & Organisation Design
  • Procurement Strategy for Services
  • Skills Mix Analysis & Forecasting
  • Rostering Strategy & Scheduling Optimisation
  • Cost Efficiency Reviews
  • KPI Dashboards & Reporting
  • Workforce Process Improvement

Defence & Government Supply Chain Consulting

Our consultants bring real-world supply chain experience from base logistics to multi-tier procurement, combined with deep understanding of public sector governance and risk frameworks. We design and implement defence supply chain strategies that are future-ready and built for complexity.

Key Services:

  • Defence Supply Chain Strategy
  • Supply Chain Operating Model Design
  • Integrated Product Support (IPS)
  • Supply Chain Planning & Forecasting
  • Preparedness Modelling & Resilience Diagnostics
  • Process Improvement & Cost Reviews
  • Governance Frameworks & Reporting

System Selection & Implementation

We guide agencies through the full lifecycle of supply chain and workforce technology transformation. From requirements gathering to post-go-live support, we ensure tech investments are fit-for-purpose, people-friendly, and properly embedded.

Key Services:

  • Requirements Definition & Functional Scoping
  • Technology and Software Selection
  • Implementation Project Support
  • End-User Support & Adoption

Download our Capability Overview:

A concise, shareable overview of our approach to supply chain risk and resilience across government and commercial environments.

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Download the Capability Overview (PDF)
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How to engage us

Federal & State Government panels.

Trace is a listed provider on multiple Federal and State Government panels, making it simple for agencies to engage our services through established procurement pathways. Engage our services through:

Australian National Audit Office (ANAO)
Provision of Professional and Associated Services SON3921486

System Assurance Audits, Financial Statement Audits, Performance Audits, Labour Hire Contractor Recruitment services, and other additional services.

Australian Electoral Commission (AEC)
Provision of Transport, Logistics, and Related Services SON4025476

The provision of freight transport, logistics, and associated services, including the movement of electoral materials, furniture relocation, short-term storage, and technical advice.

Department of Finance – PD
Management Advisory Services (MAS Panel) SON3751667

Benchmarking, competition and market analysis, regulatory and policy analysis, business case development, cost-benefit analysis, supply and demand forecasting and more.

NSW Government
Performance and Management Services

Government and Business Strategy, Business Processes, Financial Services, Audit, Quality Assurance and Risk, Procurement and Supply Chain Services.

Digital Transformation Agency
Performance and Management Services

Strategy, Policy and Governance services, Business, Systems and Process analysis services, Solutions Implementation services

Our Experience

Proven track record with Federal and State Government clients:

Insights and resources

Latest insights on government & defence topics.

Asset Management and MRO

Part 3 of 3 - Mogami: Sustainment Is the Real Prize

Multi-jurisdictional supply chains are now the norm, not the exception. The Mogami deal is a live case study in how Australian industry integrates global IP with local sustainment, and where the real commercial value sits.

Part 3 of 3 - Multi-Jurisdictional Supply Chains and the Sustainment Prize: The Mogami Model

The Australian Mogami-class frigate is a Japanese ship with American weapons, Norwegian missiles, European integration choices, and Australian final assembly. That is not a compromise. It is the modern reality of complex capability supply chains.

Any Australian organisation that builds, operates, or sustains complex assets (whether that is a hospital, a distribution network, a manufacturing plant, or a data centre) is navigating the same multi-jurisdictional reality. Single-country, single-source supply chains are faster to design and cheaper to run in steady state. They are also the most brittle when geopolitics, trade policy, or logistics disruption move against them.

This is Part 3 of our three-part Trace Insights series on the Mogami deal and its supply chain implications. In Part 1 we examined the sovereign capability shift the deal signals. In Part 2 we unpacked the capacity and workforce realities that will determine whether it succeeds. Here we look at the multi-jurisdictional supply chain architecture of the program and the lessons for any Australian supply chain leader navigating global complexity.

The Mogami Supply Chain Map

The Australian Mogami is a genuinely international product. Consider the actual supply chain:

The hull and platform come from Mitsubishi Heavy Industries in Japan for the first three ships, and from the Henderson Defence Precinct in Western Australia for the remaining eight. Japanese on-board systems, including radars, sonars, electronic warfare, and information processing, come from Mitsubishi Electric, NEC, Hitachi, Fujitsu, and Oki Electric Industry. The surface-to-air missiles are American Evolved Sea Sparrow Missile (ESSM) Block 2. The lightweight torpedoes are American Mk 54. The antiship missiles are Norwegian Kongsberg Naval Strike Missile (NSM). The vertical launch system is American Mk 41. Australian industry contributes final integration, test, acceptance, and long-term sustainment.

That is four different national industrial bases, multiple tier 1 primes in each, and hundreds of tier 2 and tier 3 suppliers across all of them. Each jurisdiction brings its own export controls, certification requirements, intellectual property regimes, and political risk profile. Each supplier relationship requires separate contracting, quality assurance, and long-term sustainment arrangements.

This is the norm for complex capability supply chains now. It is also increasingly the norm for non-defence supply chains in any industry where global specialisation and geopolitical risk both matter.

The "Zero Change" Myth and Why It Matters

The Mogami program was announced with a "zero change" philosophy relative to the original Japanese design. The logic was defensible: Hunter-class taught the industry that specification changes destroy programs. Start with a proven design, build it as-is, deliver on time.

Zero change has not survived contact with reality. The Australian variant now incorporates American weapons, Norwegian missiles, European radar integration choices, and Australian certification requirements. Each change is individually defensible. Collectively they are exactly the kind of scope expansion that has derailed past programs.

The Mogami experience is a universal lesson in complex supply chain integration. Pure "plug and play" almost never survives first contact with local requirements, regulatory regimes, and stakeholder politics. The realistic objective is not zero change. It is disciplined change, where every variation is assessed for downstream impact before it is approved.

For Australian organisations integrating global technology platforms, global supplier relationships, or global operating models into Australian operations, the same discipline applies. The temptation to customise is constant. The cost of customisation is usually underestimated. The organisations that succeed are the ones who say no to most change requests and invest heavily in the few that are genuinely necessary.

Sustainment Sovereignty: The Real Prize

The most important sentence in the Mogami program is the one that gets the least attention. The Commonwealth has stated that Australia is developing "an initial capability to sustain and operate the upgraded Mogami class frigates in Australia, supported by Australian industry and workers."

Sustainment is where the real long-term value of the program sits, and where the most durable commercial opportunity lives for Australian suppliers.

The build program is a fifteen-year effort. The sustainment program is a thirty-to-forty-year effort. The lifetime cost of sustaining a complex platform typically exceeds the cost of building it by a factor of two to three. The sustainment supply chain is where the long tail of revenue, skills, and industrial capability sits.

For the Australian industrial base, securing a meaningful share of the Mogami sustainment value is more important than the share of the build value. Build work is lumpy and specialist. Sustainment work is steady, recurring, and builds cumulative capability. The Commonwealth understands this, which is why sustainment sovereignty is explicit in the program's design.

The same principle applies across complex asset supply chains in other sectors. Any organisation running critical infrastructure, complex equipment, or specialist fleets should be asking: who owns the sustainment capability, where does the real maintenance and repair expertise live, and what happens if the OEM relationship deteriorates. The answers often reveal a much deeper dependency on foreign capability than the organisation realised.

The Tier 2 and Tier 3 Opportunity

For Australian tier 2 and tier 3 suppliers, the Mogami program is a generational opportunity. But the opportunity is not evenly distributed. The suppliers that will benefit most are the ones with three characteristics.

First, defence certification. ITAR qualification, Australian defence industry accreditation, and relevant ISO certifications are the entry fee. Organisations without these credentials will be locked out of the direct supply chain and limited to the deeper tiers.

Second, technology transfer readiness. The Japanese primes, particularly Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and the combat systems suppliers, will be transferring significant technology and manufacturing know-how into Australia. The Australian suppliers best positioned to absorb that transfer will be the ones with existing engineering and manufacturing capability that can extend into the new domain, not greenfield startups trying to learn the entire capability from scratch.

Third, long-term commercial relationships with the Australian primes. Austal, Civmec, BAE Systems, and the broader Henderson supplier ecosystem will be the pathway into the program for most tier 2 and tier 3 businesses. Building those relationships now, before the contracts are let, is how competitive advantage accrues. Suppliers who wait until 2029 will find themselves bidding into a supply chain that has already been effectively populated.

The broader lesson for Australian supply chain leaders is that major industrial programs reshape the supplier landscape far beyond the program itself. Capability, capacity, and commercial relationships developed in service of one major program tend to become platforms for other programs and other sectors. The Australian organisations that invest in supplier development now will be the ones best positioned across the next decade of Australian infrastructure, manufacturing, and technology investment.

Regional Sustainment and the MRO Hub Opportunity

There is a further dimension to the Mogami program that is not yet widely discussed but is commercially significant. New Zealand has expressed interest in acquiring the upgraded Mogami as a replacement for its own frigate fleet. The Japanese and New Zealand defence ministers have committed to continued discussion on a possible frigate deal.

If New Zealand proceeds, Henderson becomes a regional maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) hub for Mogami-class frigates across the Indo-Pacific. The commercial economics of the Australian industrial base change materially when the sustainment market extends from eleven ships to fifteen or twenty. Scale unlocks investment, investment unlocks capability, and capability unlocks further work.

The same logic applies to other allied navies operating Japanese, American, or European naval platforms in the region. Australia's geography, infrastructure, and industrial base position Henderson as a natural MRO hub for Indo-Pacific naval operations, particularly as geopolitical tensions constrain access to Chinese and other commercial shipyards.

This is a supply chain strategy question, not just a defence industrial policy question. Australian organisations operating in adjacent sectors (logistics, engineering services, precision manufacturing, technology integration) should be thinking about what regional hub positioning looks like for their own operations.

Lessons for Non-Defence Supply Chains

The Mogami supply chain architecture is extreme in scale and complexity, but the principles it embeds are directly applicable to Australian supply chains across retail, FMCG, health, infrastructure, and government.

Integrated supply chains require integrated governance. A supply chain spanning four national jurisdictions, multiple primes, and hundreds of suppliers cannot be managed transactionally. It requires governance structures that surface risk early, coordinate across commercial boundaries, and make integrated decisions about trade-offs between cost, quality, and time. Most Australian organisations have governance structures designed for a simpler supply chain reality and have not updated them for current complexity.

Sustainment capability is the most under-valued asset on the balance sheet. Boards routinely focus on capital cost, unit cost, and operating cost. They rarely focus on sustainment capability, repair infrastructure, and long-term supplier relationships. These are the things that determine resilience when disruption hits, and they are the things that degrade quietly over years of cost-down pressure.

Tier 2 and tier 3 supplier relationships are strategic assets. The commodities approach to supplier management (shortest list, lowest price, shortest contract) produces brittle supply chains. The strategic approach (genuine partnership, honest forecasts, fair commercial terms, capability investment) produces resilient supply chains. The difference shows up in disruption, not in steady state.

Multi-source, multi-jurisdiction is the baseline, not the exception. Any critical supply chain node that depends on a single supplier in a single country is a risk the organisation is choosing to carry. Sometimes that choice is the right one. More often it is a legacy arrangement that was never stress-tested against current geopolitical reality. The Mogami program is a recognition at national policy level that multi-jurisdictional is now the operating assumption.

How Trace Consultants Can Help

The multi-jurisdictional supply chain complexity embedded in the Mogami program is the same complexity our clients are navigating across retail, FMCG, health, infrastructure, and government contexts. Global sourcing strategy, supply chain risk management, sustainment capability design, and supplier ecosystem development are core capabilities across the Trace practice.

Procurement Strategy and Category Management. We help Australian organisations design procurement strategies that balance cost, service, and resilience across global supply bases. Our procurement services cover category management, strategic sourcing, supplier rationalisation, and procurement operating model design. We have deep experience in complex multi-jurisdictional supply chains across public and private sector clients.

Resilience and Risk Management. Multi-jurisdictional supply chains require deliberate risk frameworks that translate geopolitical, commercial, and operational risk into concrete supplier, inventory, and logistics decisions. Our resilience and risk management practice includes senior leaders with direct Commonwealth supply chain resilience experience, and we have applied these frameworks across retail, FMCG, health, and critical infrastructure contexts.

Strategy and Network Design. Supply chain network design is where multi-jurisdictional strategy becomes operational. We help organisations design networks that balance global sourcing, regional hubs, and local presence to deliver cost, service, and resilience outcomes. Our strategy and network design work combines analytical modelling with operational judgement.

Technology Enablement. Multi-jurisdictional supply chain visibility, control, and integration require the right technology platform. Our technology practice helps organisations select, implement, and optimise supply chain technology to support global operating models.

Where to Begin

If your organisation operates across multiple jurisdictions, sources globally, or runs complex supply chains with significant offshore dependency, four immediate diagnostics are worth running.

First, build an honest supply chain dependency map. Not the procurement spend analysis. The actual physical and commercial dependency map that shows where your critical flows originate, who controls them, and what your alternatives are. Most organisations discover dependencies they did not know they had.

Second, run a sustainment capability audit. For your critical assets, who actually maintains and repairs them, where does the engineering expertise live, and what happens if the OEM relationship deteriorates or geopolitics changes access. The answers often expose capability gaps that have built up quietly over years.

Third, review your supplier ecosystem strategy. Beyond the tier 1 primes, how well do you understand your tier 2 and tier 3 supplier base, and how strong are your commercial relationships. In a tightening supplier market, these relationships are protective assets. In a loosening market, they are optimisation opportunities. Either way, they are strategic, not transactional.

Fourth, stress-test your multi-jurisdictional governance. If a disruption event required coordinated decisions across multiple suppliers in multiple jurisdictions, would your governance structure surface the issue, assemble the right decision-makers, and execute a coordinated response. Most governance structures cannot, and this is a significant operational risk that boards rarely see until it matters.

The Bigger Picture

The Mogami program is the most visible expression of a broader shift in how Australia, and Australian industry, thinks about complex supply chains. Single-country dependency is no longer an acceptable operating assumption. Multi-jurisdictional supply chains, sustainment sovereignty, and deliberate tier 2 supplier ecosystem development are becoming the new baseline.

These principles are now being applied at national scale in defence. They are already being applied at organisational scale across Australian retail, FMCG, health, infrastructure, and government. The organisations that understand this shift, and that build the procurement, operations, and governance capability to operate in it, will outperform those that continue to run supply chains designed for a simpler world.

The Mogami program will be watched closely across the Australian industrial base for the next fifteen years. Whether it succeeds will shape how Australia thinks about sovereign capability, concurrent programs, and multi-jurisdictional supply chains for a generation. For supply chain leaders across every sector, it is a live case study in the realities, opportunities, and hard choices that now define complex supply chain management in Australia.

Asset Management and MRO

Part 2 of 3 - Australia's Defence Concurrency Challenge

Australia is attempting to run more concurrent major industrial programs than at any time since WWII. The workforce, capacity, and supplier constraints are real, and the lessons extend well beyond defence.

Part 2 of 3 - The Henderson Question: Concurrency, Capacity, and the Workforce Squeeze Behind Australia's Defence Build-Out

The Mogami frigate deal signed on 18 April 2026 commits Australia to building eight advanced stealth frigates at Henderson, Western Australia, from the early 2030s. It is a transformational industrial program. It is also running directly into three other transformational industrial programs competing for the same workforce, the same suppliers, and in some cases the same physical shipyards.

Australia is attempting to execute more concurrent major defence industrial programs simultaneously than at any point since the Second World War. The Mogami program overlaps with the AUKUS nuclear submarine build-out, the Hunter-class frigate program at Osborne, and a growing pipeline of landing craft, patrol boats, and support vessels across Henderson and elsewhere. Each program on its own would stretch Australia's industrial base. All of them at once is a different problem entirely.

This is Part 2 of our three-part Trace Insights series on the Mogami deal and its supply chain implications. In Part 1 we examined what the deal signals about sovereign capability strategy. Here we unpack the capacity and workforce realities that will actually determine whether it succeeds, and the lessons for any Australian organisation running concurrent major programs.

The Henderson Reality

The Henderson Defence Precinct is the Australian end of the Mogami program. It is also one of the busiest industrial sites in the country. Austal Defence Shipbuilding, Civmec, and BAE Systems all operate major facilities there, alongside a growing tier 2 supplier base.

Austal is currently the designated national shipbuilder in the west, executing the Guardian-class patrol boat program and a concurrent medium landing craft program. It has signed a Strategic Shipbuilding Agreement with the Commonwealth that positions it as the likely lead for the local Mogami build. Civmec has just finished its Offshore Patrol Vessel work and is transitioning into a significant Landing Ship Transport program, with a new build hall capable of accommodating frigate-sized hulls. BAE Systems operates the precinct's maintenance and upgrade capability. There is also an ASC submarine sustainment facility in the same precinct.

The Commonwealth's stated precondition for the local Mogami build is "successful consolidation of the Henderson Defence Precinct." That phrase is doing an enormous amount of work. It implies that the current multi-entity industrial structure cannot absorb the Mogami program as-is. Something has to change. Whether that is commercial consolidation, facility expansion, shared infrastructure, or a combination of all three is still being worked through. What is clear is that eight frigates on top of existing programs requires fundamentally more capacity than Henderson has today.

The AUKUS Overlay

The Henderson capacity question does not exist in isolation. It sits inside a national defence industrial program in which AUKUS is the gravitational centre.

The AUKUS submarine build-out, planned for Osborne in South Australia and with significant sustainment activity in Western Australia, will absorb an enormous share of Australia's naval engineering and manufacturing workforce over the next two decades. Nuclear-qualified welders, systems engineers, naval architects, combat systems specialists, and program managers are already in short supply. AUKUS, Mogami, Hunter, and the broader surface fleet expansion will all be drawing from the same workforce pool.

The Commonwealth's own analysis has acknowledged that the AUKUS program requires Australia to build an engineering and manufacturing workforce at a scale and pace that has no recent precedent. The Mogami program adds demand on top of that. The Hunter-class program at Osborne adds more. The landing craft and support vessel programs add more again.

The mathematics is unforgiving. You cannot train a ten-year nuclear-qualified naval engineer in eighteen months. You cannot conjure a workforce of 10,000 skilled tradespeople in Western Australia without pulling them from other sectors, raising wages, and accepting significant attrition elsewhere.

Workforce Economics: The Real Bottleneck

The Commonwealth has referenced 10,000 high-skilled jobs in Western Australia as a benefit of the Mogami program. It is also the central risk.

Australian skilled trades wages in defence-adjacent sectors are already rising faster than general wages. Expect that pressure to intensify as Mogami, AUKUS, and Hunter ramp concurrently. Mining and resources, construction, and general manufacturing will all lose workers to the defence primes. The flow-on effect into supply chain, procurement, and operations roles in adjacent sectors will be real.

This is the workforce reality that every Australian organisation needs to factor into its next three to five year planning:

Skilled trades wages in construction, manufacturing, engineering, and logistics in WA and SA will outpace general wage growth significantly over the next decade. Any capital project, industrial operation, or supply chain network with exposure to these labour markets should be stress-testing its cost base.

Retention will matter more than recruitment. With multiple major defence programs bidding for the same talent, the organisations that hold their teams together through better culture, career pathways, and working conditions will outperform those who rely on market rates alone.

Tier 2 and tier 3 suppliers to the defence primes will experience severe capacity constraints. If your organisation relies on any of these same suppliers for engineering services, precision manufacturing, specialist logistics, or technology integration, expect longer lead times and selective customer service.

Interstate and international labour mobility will accelerate. Expect to see skilled migration programs expand, state-based incentive programs grow, and organisations compete for talent far beyond their traditional catchment.

This is not a defence problem. It is a national workforce redistribution, and any Australian organisation that assumes labour market conditions over the next decade will resemble the last decade is planning against a reality that has already changed.

The Tier 2 and Tier 3 Capacity Gap

Beyond the primes, the real supply chain question is the Australian tier 2 and tier 3 supplier base. These are the specialist engineering firms, precision manufacturers, software integrators, logistics providers, and technical consultancies that do the actual work under the prime contractors' banners.

Australia's tier 2 and tier 3 industrial base is relatively small by international comparison, concentrated in a handful of cities, and already operating near capacity. The Mogami program will require a significant expansion of this base to support an Australian content target, skills transfer from Japanese suppliers, and long-term sustainment capability.

The opportunity is real. The challenge is that expanding tier 2 and tier 3 capacity takes years, not quarters. It requires capital investment, workforce growth, certification (including ITAR and defence-specific accreditations), and the development of commercial relationships with the primes that do not exist today. Organisations that start positioning now will have competitive advantage. Organisations that wait until the contracts are let will find themselves shut out of a generational opportunity.

The knock-on for non-defence supply chains is that Australian tier 2 and tier 3 capacity is finite. The same engineering services firms, precision manufacturers, and specialist logistics providers that will grow defence workload will have less capacity for retail, FMCG, health, and infrastructure clients. Expect lead time pressure, pricing inflation, and supplier prioritisation conversations across the board.

The Hunter-Class Cautionary Tale

The Hunter-class frigate program at Osborne is the closest available case study for what happens when a major Australian naval program runs into industrial reality. The program has absorbed significant cost overruns and schedule delays, largely driven by specification changes relative to the original UK Type 26 design.

The lesson every defence industrial leader has absorbed from Hunter is that specification discipline is the single most important variable in program success. Every change introduced after contract signing compounds through engineering, supply chain, manufacturing, and test. A 5 per cent design variation can translate to a 25 per cent cost and schedule variation by the time it works through the supply chain.

The Commonwealth has tried to learn this lesson with Mogami. The stated philosophy has been "zero change" from the Japanese baseline design, precisely to avoid Hunter's trajectory. In practice, zero change has already become partial change: American weapons systems (ESSM, Mk 54), Norwegian antiship missiles (NSM), and European integration choices are replacing the original Japanese configuration. Each of those changes is defensible individually. Collectively they are the kind of creeping scope expansion that killed the Hunter schedule.

Whether Mogami maintains discipline through the next decade is the program's central execution risk. It is also the principle every Australian organisation running a complex transformation program needs to internalise. Scope discipline is the single highest-leverage decision in program delivery. Every change costs more than it appears to cost at the moment it is approved.

Principles for Running Concurrent Major Programs

The Mogami, AUKUS, and Hunter concurrency problem is an extreme version of a challenge every large Australian organisation faces. How do you run multiple major transformation programs simultaneously without destroying the quality of each one?

A few principles that hold across defence, retail, FMCG, health, and government contexts:

Sequence ruthlessly. The temptation to run everything in parallel to hit board-committed timelines is strong and usually wrong. A staggered sequence where each program has a window of executive attention, workforce priority, and supplier capacity delivers better outcomes than five programs all peaking simultaneously.

Budget the workforce, not just the money. Financial budgets are well understood. Workforce budgets (who is available, where, for how long, with what skills) are routinely under-planned. Most program failures trace back to workforce constraints that were visible in advance and ignored.

Contract for capacity, not just capability. In a constrained supplier market, the contract that secures guaranteed capacity (engineers, hours, facility time) is worth more than the contract with the best unit rate. Procurement leaders who understand this shift are protecting their programs. The ones who are still optimising for unit cost are losing access to the suppliers that can actually deliver.

Invest in the tier 2 supplier relationship. The primes will always look after themselves. Your program outcomes depend on the specialist engineering, technical, and logistics firms in the next layer down. Build genuine commercial relationships with these suppliers. Pay on time. Share forecasts. Treat them as partners rather than commoditised inputs.

Discipline scope changes with extreme prejudice. Every change request should go through a formal assessment that makes the downstream cost and schedule impact visible before it is approved. Organisations that manage this well deliver. Organisations that do not, do not.

How Trace Consultants Can Help

Concurrent program delivery, workforce capacity planning, and supplier capacity management are core capabilities across the Trace practice. We work with Australian organisations across defence, infrastructure, retail, FMCG, health and aged care, and government on the operational realities of delivering complex change at pace.

Strategic Workforce Planning. We help organisations quantify the workforce required to deliver their strategic agenda, identify capacity gaps, and design the recruitment, retention, and capability build programs needed to close them. Our strategic workforce planning work has been applied across retail, aged care, health, and government contexts where workforce is the binding constraint on growth.

Project and Change Management. We deliver complex transformation programs with senior consulting teams rather than junior delivery models, which matters when the program is high-stakes and the margin for error is small. Our project and change management practice combines structured delivery methodology with the practical judgement that comes from running major programs for ASX 100 and Commonwealth clients.

Organisational Design. Delivering concurrent programs requires the right operating model, governance, and role clarity. Our organisational design work helps organisations build structures that can actually execute, rather than structures that look right on an org chart.

Planning and Operations. The workforce and capacity questions we discuss above are operational realities, not strategy slides. Our planning and operations practice works with operations leaders on the S&OP, IBP, scheduling, and capacity planning disciplines that make concurrent programs deliverable.

Where to Begin

If you are running multiple major programs concurrently, or about to, three immediate diagnostics are worth running.

First, build an honest workforce demand forecast across your program portfolio. Not an aspirational one. A realistic one that accounts for ramp-up time, attrition, and skills availability in your actual labour market. Most organisations find their concurrent program portfolio is materially over-committed against available workforce when they look at it this way.

Second, stress-test your tier 2 supplier capacity. If your programs all hit peak demand in the same quarter, which suppliers will be overloaded, and what is your mitigation. Usually the answer involves longer-term contracts with your most critical suppliers or deliberate investment in alternative capacity.

Third, review your scope change discipline. In the last twelve months, how many change requests were approved on each program. What was the cumulative cost and schedule impact. Most organisations are surprised by what they find when they actually measure this.

These three diagnostics will tell you more about whether your program portfolio is deliverable than any executive steering committee report.

The Bigger Picture

The Mogami program will succeed or fail on execution, not strategy. The same is true of every major transformation program running in Australia right now. The strategic rationale is usually sound. The capacity, workforce, and supplier realities are where programs break.

Australian organisations that understand this shift, and that build operational capability around concurrency, workforce planning, and supplier capacity, will outperform those that continue to plan as if labour, capital, and supplier capacity are infinite.

In Part 3 we examine the multi-jurisdictional supply chain architecture of the Mogami program, the sustainment sovereignty question, and how Australian industry plugs into complex global build models. It is where the long-term commercial opportunity actually sits.

Asset Management and MRO

Part 1 of 3 - What Mogami Means for Australian Supply Chains

The Mogami deal is not just about frigates. It is the clearest signal yet that sovereign supply chain capability is now national policy, and what that means for Australian industry goes well beyond defence.

Part 1 of 3 - What Mogami Means for Australian Supply Chains: The Sovereign Capability Shift

On 18 April 2026, Australia signed a contract in Melbourne that will reshape the Australian industrial base for two decades. The initial A$10 billion commitment to Japan's Mitsubishi Heavy Industries for the first three of eleven upgraded Mogami-class frigates, with the remaining eight to be built in Western Australia, is the largest defence export deal in Japan's postwar history. The total program is expected to approach A$20 billion across its life.

For Australian supply chain, procurement, and operations leaders, this deal is more than a headline. It is the clearest policy signal yet that sovereign supply chain capability has moved from rhetoric to balance sheet. Whether your organisation sits in defence, retail, FMCG, health, infrastructure, or government, the Mogami program is a live case study in how Australia is now thinking about industrial resilience, multi-jurisdictional supply chains, and the real cost of sovereignty.

This is Part 1 of a three-part Trace Insights series. In this piece we unpack what the deal actually signals about sovereign supply chain strategy and what it means for organisations well beyond the defence sector.

The Deal in Brief

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries will build the first three upgraded Mogami-class general purpose frigates in Japan for the Royal Australian Navy, with the first delivery scheduled for 2029 and operational deployment in 2030. The remaining eight ships will be built at the Henderson Defence Precinct in Western Australia from the early 2030s, subject to consolidation of the precinct. The upgraded Mogami will carry American and European weapons systems (ESSM Block 2, Mk 54 lightweight torpedoes, Kongsberg's Naval Strike Missile), integrated with Japanese sensors, radars, and combat systems from suppliers including Mitsubishi Electric, NEC, Hitachi, Fujitsu, and Oki Electric.

The Commonwealth has linked the program to tens of billions of dollars in defence investment in Western Australia and around 10,000 high-skilled jobs. The frigates replace Australia's ageing Anzac-class and form the backbone of what the Government has described as continuous naval shipbuilding in the west.

That is the headline. The substance is considerably more interesting.

Why This Is a Sovereign Supply Chain Story, Not a Shipbuilding Story

For decades, Australia's default approach to complex capability procurement has been binary: either buy finished product from an allied nation, or attempt a bespoke domestic build with heavy local content mandates. Both models have delivered uneven results. The first creates long-term dependency on foreign sustainment pipelines. The second has produced schedule and cost overruns in programs like the Hunter-class frigate and the earlier Collins-class submarine.

The Mogami deal is a different structural model. It is neither a pure import nor a pure local build. It is a hybrid in which foreign intellectual property, Japanese manufacturing discipline, and Australian industrial capacity are deliberately stitched together over a ten to fifteen year transition. Three ships offshore to establish the platform and prove delivery pace. Eight ships onshore to absorb technology, skills, and sustainment capability into the Australian industrial base.

That structure is the point. It is a template for how Australia now thinks about sovereign capability in a world where pure self-sufficiency is economically unrealistic but pure dependency is strategically unacceptable.

The Four Principles Embedded in the Mogami Model

Strip away the defence specifics and four principles emerge that apply to any Australian organisation thinking seriously about supply chain sovereignty.

Principle 1: Sovereignty is about sustainment, not just manufacture. The Commonwealth's stated rationale for building eight ships in Australia is not primarily about the hulls. It is about embedding the engineering, maintenance, repair, and overhaul capability to keep the fleet operational for thirty years without foreign dependency. For any Australian organisation running critical assets (hospitals, distribution networks, manufacturing plant, energy infrastructure) the same logic applies. Owning the asset is table stakes. Owning the capability to sustain, repair, and upgrade it is where resilience actually lives.

Principle 2: Sovereignty costs more in the short term and pays back in the long term. The first three ships built in Japan will deliver faster and cheaper than the eight built in Australia. That is simply the economics of existing capacity versus capacity being built. The Commonwealth has accepted that premium deliberately because the alternative, another two decades of foreign sustainment dependency, carries a strategic cost that does not appear on any spreadsheet. Australian boards making build-versus-buy decisions on their own critical capability need to weight long-term optionality, not just short-term cost.

Principle 3: Multi-jurisdictional supply chains are now the norm. The Australian Mogami will integrate Japanese hull and sensors, American combat systems and weapons, Norwegian antiship missiles, and Australian-built final assembly and sustainment. That is not a design failure. It is the best available answer when no single nation can build the whole capability alone. Australian procurement leaders across every sector are discovering the same reality. Single-source single-country supply chains are faster to design and cheaper to run, and they break catastrophically when geopolitics shifts.

Principle 4: Industrial base capacity is a national security asset. The Mogami program's success depends on the consolidation of the Henderson Defence Precinct, a multi-year industrial reorganisation involving Austal, Civmec, BAE Systems, and tier 2 suppliers. The Commonwealth is effectively underwriting that consolidation because it has concluded that Australian industrial base capacity, not just military capability, is the binding constraint on national resilience. The same logic is starting to drive sovereign manufacturing policy in pharmaceuticals, critical minerals, and food processing.

What This Means Beyond Defence

The Mogami deal is the most visible expression of a shift that is already underway across Australian supply chains.

Australian retailers who spent the 2010s optimising for the lowest landed cost from single Asian manufacturing hubs are now quietly rebuilding dual-source arrangements and holding more strategic inventory in country. The lessons from COVID-era stockouts and the Suez Canal blockage have not been forgotten, even if they have been de-prioritised in quarterly earnings calls.

Australian FMCG manufacturers are re-shoring specific categories, not wholesale, but deliberately for products where import exposure has proven brittle. AdBlue, urea, and specialty fertilisers are the recent memorable examples. Each one exposed a supply chain that looked efficient on paper and collapsed under a single geopolitical or logistics disruption.

Australian health and aged care operators are rethinking their consumables, pharmaceuticals, and medical device supply chains after the pandemic exposed how thin the domestic safety stock actually was. Sovereign manufacturing capacity in these categories is now a procurement strategy question, not just a policy question.

Australian infrastructure and property operators, particularly in critical sectors like data centres, airports, and ports, are rebuilding their facilities management and engineering sustainment capability after decades of offshoring it to global primes. The underlying pattern is the same as Mogami: own the sustainment, partner for the build.

The Real Test: Can Australia Execute?

The principles are sound. The execution risk is real. Australian industrial history is full of programs where the strategy made sense on paper and the delivery fell over in practice. The Hunter-class frigate is the cautionary tale sitting directly alongside the Mogami program: same country, same Navy, same shipbuilding objective, very different trajectory.

The critical differences this time are pace and discipline. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries has a thirty-five year record of on-time delivery to the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force. The Commonwealth has committed to a "zero change" philosophy (though that has already been partially compromised by weapons system integration) precisely because it understands that specification drift is what destroys programs of this scale. Whether that discipline holds across a fifteen-year program spanning multiple Defence Ministers and industry cycles is the open question.

For Australian supply chain leaders watching this play out, the Mogami program will be a live demonstration of whether Australian industry can absorb complex foreign IP, stand up sovereign sustainment, and manage multi-jurisdictional supplier integration at scale. If it succeeds, the model will be replicated in other sectors. If it struggles, the policy appetite for sovereignty-led procurement across government will cool quickly.

How Trace Consultants Can Help

The strategic shift embedded in the Mogami program is the same shift happening across our client base in retail, FMCG, health and aged care, hospitality, and government. Sovereign capability thinking, multi-jurisdictional supply chain design, and resilience-weighted procurement are now core operating questions, not policy theory.

Supply Chain Strategy and Network Design. We help Australian organisations redesign their supply networks to balance cost, service, and resilience, including sovereign capability analysis, dual-source strategies, and strategic inventory positioning. Our work on strategy and network design directly addresses the build-versus-buy and domestic-versus-import trade-offs the Mogami program is navigating at national scale.

Resilience and Risk Management. We design supply chain risk frameworks that translate geopolitical, natural, and operational disruption risk into concrete supplier, inventory, and logistics decisions. Our resilience and risk management practice draws on deep experience in national supply chain resilience, including Partner-level experience in the Commonwealth's Office of Supply Chain Resilience.

Procurement Strategy. Sovereign capability is meaningless without a procurement operating model that can actually deliver it. We help organisations redesign category strategies, supplier segmentation, and contracting models to support long-term sustainment rather than just transactional cost reduction. Explore our procurement services for category management, strategic sourcing, and supplier rationalisation.

Government and Defence Advisory. We work with Commonwealth and State agencies, defence primes, and critical infrastructure operators on supply chain strategy, procurement, and operations. Our government and defence practice combines senior consulting experience with direct public sector and defence industry backgrounds.

Where to Begin

If your organisation is asking the sovereign capability question seriously, the starting point is not a strategy paper. It is a clear-eyed view of where your supply chain is genuinely exposed.

First, map your critical flows. Identify the ten to fifteen SKUs, services, or capabilities whose failure would materially disrupt your operations or customers. Most organisations find this list is shorter than they expected and more concentrated than they realised.

Second, trace the actual dependency chain. Who makes it, where, under what commercial arrangement, with what alternate sources. A surprising number of "Australian" supply chains dissolve at tier 2 or tier 3 into single-country concentration.

Third, price the optionality. Calculate what it would cost to build dual-source, near-shore, or sovereign capability for the critical few. Then weigh that cost against the actual business disruption cost of a realistic failure scenario. In most cases the sovereignty premium is smaller than boards assume.

Fourth, build the program. Sovereign capability is not a procurement project. It is a multi-year transformation that touches network design, supplier contracting, workforce capability, and technology.

The Bigger Picture

The Mogami deal will be remembered as the moment Australia formalised a new industrial model. Not full self-sufficiency, which is economically unviable for a country of 27 million people. Not passive dependency, which has become strategically unacceptable. A third way in which foreign capability and domestic industrial base are stitched together deliberately, with sovereignty measured in sustainment rather than manufacture.

That model is already reshaping procurement, supply chain, and operations strategy across Australian industry. The leaders who engage with it early will shape how their organisations navigate the next decade of supply chain volatility. The ones who treat it as a defence-sector curiosity will find themselves retrofitting solutions under pressure.

In Part 2 we examine the capacity and workforce realities that will determine whether the Mogami program succeeds, and the lessons for any Australian organisation running concurrent major transformation programs.

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