Thursday, July 17, 2025

Australia's PM Anthony Albanese sets the stage for Chinese medical researchers to freely access Australia's world leading medical research,and gain access to US and UK research they are denied

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 


Australia's PM Anthony Albanese has declared in China:

Australia is a world leader in medical research. And Australian and Chinese scientists are working together towards new breakthroughs. Today in Chengdu, we brought together leaders in the medical technology industry from Australia and China. Together, our two countries can bring new hope and better health to people right across the world.


He has set the stage for Chinese medical researchers to freely access Australia's world leading medical research,and importantly gain access to US and UK research they are denied. That pipeline can of course apply to all other areas of research.


Very much like the plot in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, which spies consider the best spy novel.







END



TO BE READ WITH


Sunday, January 17, 2021

Monash aircraft development partner COMAC of China identified as a Communist Party China military company: Security risks for Monash's other partner SAFRAN even more obvious

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 


China analyst Geoff Wade tweeted this morning: 

Conversation



8:35 AM · Jan 15, 2021·Twitter Web App


Wade's tweet throws fresh light on the story below posted on this blog last year:

Thursday, June 11, 2020

Monash Uni partnering China's COMAC in aircraft 3D printing venture will expose SAFRAN of France to theft of proprietary French jet engine 3D printing technology:Monash has had a prior agreement with SAFRAN to develop 3D printing technology for aircraft engines since 2015

by Ganesh Sahathevan






In 2015 Engineering Australia and others reported:

The world’s first 3D-printed jet engine was revealed to the world at the 2015 Melbourne International Airshow. The team, which included Safran, Monash University and Amaero, in collaboration with Deakin University and the CSIRO, took a Safran gas turbine power unit from a Falcon executive jet, scanned it and created two copies using their customised 3D metal printers.

“We proved that our team were world-leaders,” said Professor Xinhua Wu, Director of the Monash Centre for Additive Manufacturing. “I’m delighted to see our technology leap from the laboratory to a factory at the heart of Europe’s aerospace industry in Toulouse.”
Amaero will establish a new manufacturing facility on the Safran Power Units site in Toulouse using a 3D printing technology known as Selective Laser Melting. They will not only bring the know-how and intellectual property they’ve developed in partnership with Monash University, they will also relocate two of the large printers they have customised for this manufacturing task.
Safran Power Units will test and validate the components the team makes, and then the factory will enter serial production, producing components that Safran Power Units will post process, machine and assemble into auxiliary power units and turbojet engines for commercial and defence use. The project team expect that production will commence in the first quarter of 2017.
“Our new facility will be embedded within the Safran Power Units factory in Toulouse and will make components for Safran’s auxiliary power units and turbojet engines,” said Amaero CEO Barrie Finnin.

Monash has since formed a partnership with China's COMAC, signed in 2017, which committed both parties to work on the design of specialised new 3D printed alloys for the design and construction of the C919.

The security implications for SAFRAN are obvious, even if Monash VC Margaret Gardner refuses to see any danger of espionage.


TO BE READ WITH
Australian uni continuing work on Chinese plane linked to espionage claims


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